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· ~· ··· ·

. ...

..

'

Thursday; December 22, 1994

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Page-1G-The Dailv Sentinel

.

J.

ma
Ohio Lottery

Owners
•
Impose
salary cap

MACY
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Buckeye 5:
6-15-18-25-29

Page 5

NOW THRU CHRISTMAS EVE

Low,lolllcbtln mld~,part­

ly cloady. S.twday, doudy.
High ln40s.

•

en tine
Vol. 45, NO. 164
•Copyright 1994

2 Seellona, 32 ,.._ 311-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday,· December 23, 1994

A Muttlmeclll Inc. New ; t 1P

Study:
prisons
got
lion's
share
of
spending
.
:E.
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2
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Uleo And Great Wraps

tmas Gift Wrap

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For Gift
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Includes Tags, Seals, Ribbons and Bows

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Artieieial
Flowers.

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31/a ;-al. fJans .Of
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Our Uomplete Stoek
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'r

'

24••
36 ...

'

6.59

In terms of dollars instead of percentages, spending for prisons was

~e~ured in millions while amounts for education and welfare were in

2•••
36ax

33 113%0FF

:No paper

:Monday
The Daily Stnrintl business
office will close at noon Satur·
, day. The newspaper will not be
1 • .published Monday so that its
: employees may observe tbi:
' Christmas holiday.
.
~ular publil:ation and busi·
L...ness bours resume Tuesday.
,

IbiD :

Christmas is.. --___, Homeless people sue park cops
in wake of White House s~ooting
WASHINGTON (AP) -Three
homeless people wbo live across
tbe street from tbe Wbite House are
suing tbc U.S. Park Police for
harassment that they say includes
being abused, kicked and poked
wilb nightsticks.
·
Tbe Jaws1,1it filed Tbursday
came after Park Police killed
another homeless m.an from tbat
same park wbo cbarged at an offi·
cer witb a knife and was gunned
down on tbe sidewalk on the Penn·
sylvania Avenue side of tbe jlresi·
dential mansion.
•
The lawsuit· alleges that
Marcelino Cornie!, 33, who was
sbot Tuesday mornin_g afte~ be
chased U.S. Park Pollee off1cer
Stephen J. O'Neill with a knife,
bad been kicked and prodded by
O'Neill a few hours earlier.
Cornie) was sbot by another
park policeman, identified today by
Lt. Kent Bowen as Jeff Leon
Capps. Cornie! died Wednesday
night after undergoing surgery
twice.
The incident was highly publi·
cized because or its locale, the fact

new

Rcpublll)llf-ltd .
House of RepRSCDtatives. ·
Rl:p\Jblicans who will bold a 56·
43 m~Orlty wbCIJ: the .House ron·
venes Jan. 3·s&amp;id'Tbursday they
plan a 25'percent cut in lbe number
of committees to save an estimated ~
$350,000 a year.
.
They also released a committee
lineup that finds representatives
from New Concord, Columbus, ·
Milford and other communities
beading panels tbat some
Democrats from Cleveland bave
guided.
Republicans chose Rep. Tom
Jobnson of New Concord to chair
the Finance and Appropriations
Committee, wbicb bandies the stale
budget and other spending bills.
Johnson, wbo bas been ranking
minority member, will succeed
Rep. Pauick Sweeney, D-Cieveland, wbo last month was chosen
minority leader.
. Cblp !'&lt;fcConviUe, a House GOP
spokesman, said the changes reflect
areas of Republican strength.
"We've attempted to make sure
there was a good geographic bal:ince 301ong the rommittee leaders
tbat were appoinled," McConville
said. "Not to mention lbe fact tbat
we've tried to plug in the people
wbo have the right experience in
tbe right como\ ittee slots.''
Although Democrat·ricb Cleveland would itself provide no GOP
committee cbair, Rep. Ed Kasputis
of Westlalce, a Cleveland suburb,
was appointed chairman of tbe
Judiciary 'lind Criminal Justic~
Committee.
. Rep. Mike Wise of Broadview
Heights, also in Cuyahoga County,
was tapped to bead the Colleges
and Universities Subcommitlee of
die House Education Committee.
. In addition to Sweeney. other
Democrats from Cleveland who
iiave beaded committees include
Reps. Vermel Whalen, Troy Lee
James, and Ronald Silster. Demo·
cratic Reps. Rocco Colonna of
Broo'k Park and Ronald Mottl of
Parma, both Cuyahoga County.
also c!Wr committees.
Speaker-elect Jo Ann Davidson
of Reynoldsburg said Republicans
will recommend trimming.from 27
. 20 tbe number of standing com- .

years .

A_ooun~il report sbow~ Stale govemmem spending grew fascer
billions.
bolb mflauon and personalmoome over lbe last I 0 years .
But Donald Bemo, council president, said corrections spending may
It said lbe stale spent $15.1 billion in stale tax receipts, lottery profits l
crack lbe $1 biUion barrier in the next budget year starting July I:
and federal money during the 1994 budget year. That was an inaease of :
"That's going to be lbe one they say will bave a huge increase in the $7.3 biUion, or93 percent, over the amount spent in 1984.
budget in Jwmary," Bemo said Thursday.
"This covers state and federal spending. Our app-oacb is wbetber it's
"It wouldn't surprise me if we go over $1 biUion for prisons wilb lbe federal money or stale money, it's still tax money," Bemo said.
kind of increases lbey 're talking about,'' be said.
During the same decade, total personal income rose an estimated 66
Gov. George Voinovich expects to send a proposed two-year budget to percent, wbile inflation was about 43 percent.
the printers Jan. 15 before its introduction in tbe Legislature.
"The conclusion we draw is tbat this next budget's going to be bigb
Spokesman Mike Dawson said prisons will eat up 35 percent of new risk ... in terms that we can't keep this trend up for ever. We're going to
revenue growth in the next spending plan.
have to do some cutting or have a tax increase," Bemo said.
·
State Budget Director Gregory Browning said planners expect .tax • The council is a nonprofit tax and economic research organization
receipts will increase about $650 million in eacb of tbe next two budget whose members include businesses and schools.

COLUMBUS (AP) - Cleve·

AGreat Christmas Gift Or Familf Snaek

I

0

··iand seems out and rural Ohio in, at
leut ·So far .as eontrol of commit·

l/2 PBIUE

(

~I

1

. By JOliN CHALFANT
Associated Press Writer
· COLUMBUS- Slate government spending for prisons grew more on
a percentage basis over the last decade tban for schools, colleges or wei·
fare, a report from a private tax study group showed.
. . Tbe Obio Public Expenditure Council said the state spent $800 million
. on rebabilitation and corrections in the 1994 budget year, wbicb ended
June 30. That was an increase of $556 miUion, or 228 pen:ent, ove!' the
:last 10 years.
.
•
Stale spending for pimary and secondary education soored a 68 pet·
cent increase over the decade; higher education, 78 percent; and public
· welfare, 135 percenL

Committee
leadership
gets rural
emphasis

All ()hristmas

~s%

.· xpenul
ures .grew
.

that it was captured on videolape
and because it was one of a string
of violent episodes near or directed
at !be Wbite House.
In the pauper's suit filed in U.S.
Disuict Court, two women and a
man wbo frequent Lafayette Park
allege a paucm of harassment by
O'Neill and another park police·
man named only as "Keness."
Tbe officers regularly accused
tbe homeless wbo sleep in the park
of violating a no-camping regulalion, lbe complaint said.
· "It bas been the custom of officers O'Neill and Keness to acoompany their threats with Icicles. prod&lt;J!ng with ni~htst.icks, and banging
s1gns w11b mghtsucks even when
there is no question that those
attending are not camping," the
complaint added.
It alleged "political or religious
animosily" and said O'Neill's
"abuse of aulbority ... which pre·
ceded the shooting of Marcelino
Comiel. is a graphic demonstration
of tbe result of abuse of legal
authority."
Tbey asked the court to order

tbat neither of tbe two men be
assigned to Lafayeue Park. At a
news conference beld later in lbe
park with the White House as a
backdrop, tbe lbree men wbo flied
the suit asked for a complete inves·
ligation of tbe sbooting.
"We feel we are not being lreat·
ed as buman beings," said Warren
Gaskins .
" They have laken out their frus.
tration on us," added Robin Patton,
alluding to the much -publicized
recent security breaches at tbe
While House.
"My countty sent me to Viet·
oam, killing people," said Gregory
Parker, "but I wouldn't gun a man
down in cold blood."
Meanwhile, in Las Vegas the
. attorney for Comicl's famity'said
in an interview tbat "I haven't
beard one person say it was justi- ,
fied."
Tbe att~ey, Milton Grimes
represenled Klldney King in
er videotaped Incident involving
police. He met in Las Vegas witb
Barbara and Samuel Cornie!, the ·
parents of tbe dead man.

anotb:

CHRIST REMEMBERED - Area churches remind us
Christmas revels In the comlag of Jesus as humanity's savior.
Whether In song, prayer, or through donations to the needy,
area churches demonstrate the true spirit of Christmas. Last
Saturday night, Rutland hosted a singing Christmas tree choir
. and a live nativity scene. Above, the baby JC!IWI Is watched over
by the virgin Mary, portrayed by Shannon Enright of Rutland,
and Joseph, played by Morgan Vanlaman of Rutland. The
Christmas story still touches chords In young and ,old today.
(Sentinel photo by George Abate)

Beating suspect's case
submitted to grand jury
Sentinel News Starr
A Pomeroy man cbarged with
felonious assault in tbe alleged
beating of a I 3-month:-ald baby girl
last weekend now faces possible
indictment by a Meigs County
grand jury.
Timothy. T. Thomas, 37, 242
Condor St .. appeared Thursday
morning before Judge Pauick H.
O'Brien of the Meigs County Court
for a preliminary bearing. O'Brien
tben bound the case over for grand
jury oonsideration.
,
Thomas is accused of ~~~-!!
tbe child after it woke up •

Capt. Jim Stacy of lbe Pomeroy
Police Departmen~ who took photos of the cbild following the inci·
dent. Stacy said Thomas admitled
to striking tbe cbild.
In addition to ,testimony, photographs of tbe baby following the
alleged beating were presented.
Tbey show tbe rear or a small
cbild, red and covered with welts
and bruises from the lower back to
its knees.
Thomas, represented by attorney
Willi3Dl Safranek, remains in the
Meigs County Jail in lieu of
$75,000 bond. Felonious assault is

by the
· Department
after tbe
mothel lOOk ber to
a hospital
treatment, assisla!lt
Prosecutor Chris Tenaglia said.
O'Brien beard testimony from

~Myfeel~g1~/.:Sibesearethe

DOLLS D1STRffiVTED - Fumers Bank
employees Linda Mayer, left, -and Joann
Williams distributed beautifully costluned dOlls
to 33 female resldeilu of tbe skilled n•rll111
at Veterans Memorial Hospital tbb

by a

Charges
.
mo~nt in aneged .arson
starr '

saddest cases we have," said
Tenoglia. "Nothing breaks your
bean
more tban tbat•" •
.
t

Army al•ds ··n gun search

Law enforcement officials have , glars wbo cula'ed tbe ~t tblougb
expanded their search for guns a lide door and, OIKle mside, pried
~len~=~~~tbe ~tbt· : : ; : :..'!:r~~~.orage room

o

•

•u.,......

some belp from tbe U.S. Army.
Ten CBies of soft drinks were
According ID Sheriff James M. aboS sroleu, accuding to are~
Soulsby, nine M-1903 bolt-action ,
ou~~.1_said tbe sbenff's
rifles were stolen on June S by bur(...........,ued oa hae 3)

tile bank's dress-a-doll contest. Mayer and
Wiliams pnaent.d male "'sldents of the hospital fadllty wltll boxes of candy on bebalt of the
INink. Recelvh• a doll berefrom ,Williams is
resident Etllel Elder.

t'

Sentloel News
Two brothers bave been ""•~ed
~5
and charges are pending against
a
third person in relation tO a SUS•
peeled arson f1re on Sept 5.
•
William J. Rousb, 46, New
Haven, W.Va., and Russell M.
Roush, 32, Middleport, bave each
b~en charged with aggravated
arson and insurance fnud.
The State Fire Marsbal's office
received information that a Sepi. s
trailer fire on Salser Road near
Racine may bad been arson. Meigs

~

'

County Prosecuting Attorney Jobn
Ironically. tbc mos t serious
R. Lentes said. 'lbrougb undercov· accusations to arise from the inves- ·
er worll:, authorities were able to ligation are unrelated to tbe alleged
(lndouttbllitwasanm,beadded. arson, Lences said.
_Ru~~ Rousb is alleaed to have
"Evidence turned up by happen·
pald William Roush $1,000 to bum stance that (Russell Roush) bad
the trailer, Lentes said. A claim been molesting a 7-year-old girl,"
was then submi~ to 10 iDsunmce be ·said . He is expected to be
c&lt;mpany that plid $12,000 to Rus- charged with f11PC, a crime 111M car·
sell Rousb, be said.
ries a uwlim- 1 IQ' .otlUie !II
Charges are also pending )lrilal. ilc lllded.
.
against a tbird subject in tile matter,
Botb .., beiDa ileld ill lib
lpltes said.
of $125,000 1iOild ea.
.

,..,

l

�friday, December 23, 1994

Commentar
The Daily Sentinel
. 111 Court Street
PomUOJ, Ohio

.tU1MDIA,INC.
ROBERT L. WJNG6'1'T
Publisher ·

CHARLENE HOEJLICH
Genenl Ma!ul&amp;er -

I..ETIF.Rs OF OPINION

MARGARET LEHEW
Controller

They abould be leu than 300
· worda loq. Alllelkn 1111 aubject 1o editing IOd muat be signed with name
address ~ telephoae number. No unaigned !ellen will be publiabed. utte~
abould be m good lllte,llldnaalnc lu11111, not penonalitiea.
1111 welcome.

.Inventing Clinton
~ without showing it

(

1
)

•
· ByWALTERR.MEARS
: AP Special Correspandent
. WASlDNG10N - "Reinventing government" is the slogan, but tbe
. task abead fill' the White House is even more demanding - reinventing
' Bill Clinton if he's to renew the Democratic lease there in 1996.
To add to tbe challenge, unless it can be accomplished without being
: ·too obvious, the changes he is undertaking will be marked down as plain .
politics, shifts to the right to try to caiCh up with !be vorers.
That would only deepen his political wodJ1eading into the era of
Republican command in Congress, because trust and a sense of drift
already are among his major problems.
·
So he's -got a tightrope to walk, and Republicans already say be's
slipped off it on their side, in a tardy effort to reclaim standing as a New
Democra~ a centrist.
'
·
No, counter the Clinton people, he's doing what be promised the voters
in the fust place. Jbe Ulluble is, that isn't what he did in tbe fust place.
He got detoured into social issues, appointments that backfired and the .
health care reform marathon, which Clinton's opponents transformed into '
a symbol of the big government the vorers don ' t want.
"The president wants to reform the way this government does busi·
ness," Leon Panetta, tbe White House chief of staff, said amid the effort
to chart a oourse for 1995 and 1996, when Clinwn intends to run for a
second term. "That's what he was elected to do.
•'He recognizes that people were not satisfied with the level of reforms
that were going on in this town,'' Panetta said in a TV inrerview.
Reinventing government to cut the payroll, save tax dollars and return
decisions from Washington to state and local governments are proposals
the DCDIOCilllic ticket ran on in 1992, said Vice President AI Gore.
True enough, but politics takes timing, and the push that's on now
looks more like a response to tbe Republican congressionalllindslide than
action to meet a set of campaign pledges. They'd slllrted the effon at rein·
vention in 1993, but not with the high profile it's getting now, on the eve
of a GOP-run Congress.
As candidate, Clinton had promised a middle class tax cut. As presi·
dent, he said the budget crunch was worse than he'd foreseen, and backed
away from that pledge.
It's back, a relatively modest $60 billion over fi1J years, "a middle
class bill of rigbts, " Clinton said. But that also looks like a rebuttal
insread of an Initiative.
So, too, on other issues; for example, Clinton's 1992 pledge to "end
welfare as we know it" with reforms .that would limit the duration ofbell'efUs, put recipients to work or into job trnining. He proposed a hill, bul
dido 't push the issue. Now Republicans have seized it, with preposals that
would make welfare a federally aided state responsibility.
. Clinton, out to reclaim tbe initiative, said that he is streamlining and
paring government to save $76 billion in the next five YC!IfS and that
Gore's reinventioq team will not look at every single government pro·
gram seeking spots for funher cuts.
''Country fnt, politics as usual dead last,'' the president said.
One Cabinet member told Clinton afrer the eledlons that if he'd given
welfare reform the priority health care g~ .the Democrats wouldn't be in
this fiX. ThatiJUIY well he so, but hindsight doesn't help much.
Republicans are on tbe offensive, even before taking over Congress on
Jan. 4. Their leaders, for example, told Clinton be should stop federal
agencies from issuing regulations, effective immediately and lasting at
least through the fust I 00 days of the new Congress, which is the time
frame House GOP leaders have set for action on their ambitious keynote
agenda
_
Clinton said no, the White House calling the moratorium idea a blun·
de~ approadl that could bar vital government actions. George Bush
tried a moratorium; aU it did was delay rule-making that flooded out afrer.
wards.
This_lime, Republicans were making a point, not a policy, telling Clio·
ton that Americans voted for smaller, less intrusive government and that
he sbould respond by taking their course: Instead, he told agencies to regulate only when necessary and in the most cost-effective way. which
soulids like Cilmmon sense by memo. Gore said he's going to "see about
reinventing the government's approach to regulatory issues."
They've got 23 months for the remodeling before the voters choose a
presidtnt.
.

'
EDITOR'S NOTEWalter R. Mears, vice president and columnist for The Associated Press, bas reported on Washington and
n~~tlonal politics ror more than 30 years.

saturday, nee. 24

A&lt;W-Weatl!e~A' forecast for doytimc conditions

Senate report indicts federal judges ~
WASHINGTON - It is the "Carpeting would have been suffi·
most expensive oourthouse in U.S. cient, enhancing the quality of
history, and it may someday be stone and millwork was not
judged as the "Helmsley Palace" required, there was no need for pri·
of the fedeml judiciary.
That's the verdict on the $1 billion courthouse and office complex By
at Foley Square in New Yorlc City
that's· getting singled out for
"uncontrolled and excessive
spending." Foley Square wilt cost
a palatial $400 per square foot, vate kitchenettes because the
according to an investigation by the judges already have their own pri·
Senate Environment and Public vale dining room, and raising ceil·
ing heights only creates wasted
Works Committee.
"No other courthouse currently space."
Although Foley Square consti·
under construction comes close to
Foley Square," the committee lutes the biggest fleecing of taxpayers uncovered during the commit·
repon states.
At the behest of judges, terrazzo tee's six-month probe, it's hardly
marble tiles were substituted for the only example of first degree
carpeting, the quality of stone for opulence. The General Services
walls in public areas was enhanced, Adminislration - the federal govcourtroom and judges' chambers ernment's landlord, which is sup·
millwork and other fini shes were posed to bold the line on expenses
upgraded, kitchenettes were includ· - has repeatedly bowed to the
ed in all chambers, and the ceiling demands of judges seeking gold·
height of the courtrooms was ·plated courtrooms. As we first
reported, some $511 million in
raised.
"None of these modifications unnecessary costs have been
were necessary,': _the repon claims. incurred for courthouse construe-

Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

tion nationwide since 1980.
According to the committee's
investigation, federal judges must
plead guilty to driving up the cost
of unnecessary expenses on the
Foley Square project. "More than
200 modifications to Foley
Square's l)riginal design and construction contract, many of which
were prompted by the Judiciary' s
insistence on larger space and additional accoutrements, amounted to
$103.3 million," the report says.
"The total costs of conlriiCt amlin·
geodes, including upgrades in
courtrooms, chambers and other
requirements of the judges will be
$135 .2 million."
.
From the outset, the report
charges, the judges in New York
clashed with GSA officials, who
grew frustrated with the demands
of the judges since they caused
delays ;md swelled the costs of the
project. One internal GSA memo
on the Foley Square project warned
that the last-minute changes and
delays, just in terms of inflation
costs, added up to $2 million per
month. "Tbe court must somehow
get the message that we_can ill

a~D JvsT~XqcT~Y

-

HoW MucH oF THe. ToY
FVNP DiD YotJ itNe$1
~~ oJ?.aNG~ CoUNTY?

Back when I was in high scllool
before World War II, a cutting per·
sonal remark -about President
Franklin Roosevelt (and 1 made my
fair share) would often be met with
the response, "If you can't respect
the man, at least respect the
office."
It is restimony to the high stan·
dards of those far-off days that I
was chastened by the reproach. The
office of president was hedged with •
a sort of divinity that prorecred its
incumbent against the cheaper
kinds of trashing.
Yet a few months ago Jay Leno
convulsed the nation by noting that
President Clinton wanted to exteitd
the Head Start program, a.j\1
adding, "From now on the women
in Clinton's horel room will get a
20--minute bead start. •' And more
recently David Letterman respond·
ed to Mr. Clinton · s complaint
about tbe intense scnitiny a presi·
dent must undergo by saying
crisply, "Bill, if you don't like
scrutiny stop dropping your
pants!"
What has happened to.the.presi·
dency7 Well, a good many things.
It must, for one thing; accept its

William A. Rusher
"hypocrisy ." We can't move
words like "penis" and "mastur·
bation" onto television and the
front pages of newspapers and the~
wonder whatever happened to rebcence when some woman files a
lawsuit describing in graphic detail
her encounrer wi~ Bm_Clinton. .
:rhen too, C:hnton ~s, ~o put 11
delicately, a chtld of b1s biDe, and
his standard of personal behavior
probably represents a new low
among occupants of the Oval
Office. FDR may have enjoyed the
favors of a good man~ women, but
no one bas yet plaus1bly accused
him (let alone Herbert Hoover or
Harry Truman) of dropping his
pants and saying "Kiss it" to a
total stranger in a hOrel room.
But the chief reason for the collapse of the barriers that used to
prorect presidents from obloquy is
the changing role of tbe media.

W.VA.

:

As GSA officials refused to
cave, U.S. District Judge John F~
Kennan also threatened to take hiS
case to a higher court: •'Should you
fail to adhere to our request for a
minimum of 504 windows which
can be opened by the Building
Manager, with a key, it is our
intention to bring this matrer to the
direct attention of Mr. Richard
Austin, the administrator of the
General Services Administration,
and of Sen. Daniel Patrick Moyni·
ban."

W~rming

temperatures
doom chance of snow

·

By March 16, 1992, the judges
==-----. had prevailed and the GSA agreed
to install operable windows in the
building at an added cost of
$145.403 - not including extra
energy costs.
The judges meticulously lracked
Foley Square, like 'it was the
of the century. They met regularly
with GSA officials and the devel-opers to' ensure ll1eir demands were.
1 met. In July 1992 four of the judges
1
toured the ceremonial counroomi
1
which is called the "crown jewel"·
of the building. The committee
report recounts the scene:
' 'One judge suggested that the
columns in the courtroom were not ·
sufficiently ornate. When the
judges were informed that theil'
request for a plastered ceiling in the ·
room would not be meL, tbey insist·
ed that the ceiling not look flimsy,
During the meeting, the judges:
requested that paneling in all the)
courtrooms be mahogany, a very·
expensive wood not available in
the United States. They also want·
ed the panelling to run floor to ceil·
ing, instead of only partially as the
original design envisioned."
Jack Anderson and Micbnl
Binstein are writers for United
.._......;=;;...--' Feature Syndicate, Inc.

.

About 30- years ago the dominant
media, which had fallen almost
entirely under liberal control, dealt
themselves a band in our national
politics by greatly increasing the
use of anonymous leaks to damll!le
politicians they disliked.
The flfst presidential victim of
this new technique was Lyndon
Johnson, of whose war in Vietnam
the liberals disapproved. Johnson
didn't even bother to run for re·
election in 1968. The second was
his successor, Richard Nixon, with
whom the media had a long-run·
ning feud. Nixon foolishly ren dered himself vulnerable by briefly
''obstructing justice" in a futile
effort to protect various aides
Implicated in the Watergate break·
in - and paid for it with an
impeachment proceeding that be
forestalled only by resigning.
That was the triumph that really
put hair on the chests of the liberal
media Since then, "advocacy jour·
nalism" has swung in ever-wider
spirals, attacking all sorts of tooth·
some targets and developing ever·
nastier techniques of destru&lt;:tion.
As Pete Hamill conceded in a
recent article, it was the liberals

. Sunday· is Chrisllllas Day but it
will seem more like Easter.
·. The National Weather Service
now says there's no chance of any
snow ,anywhere in Ohio and rem·
peratures will continue to be unsea·
sonal;lly warm, with highs
approaching 50 degrees.
Temperatures early this morning
hovered in the 30s. and dense fog
spread along the Lake Erie sbore,
eastward.
A cloud cover tonight was
expected to keep temperatures a lit·
tie warmer. Highs on Saturday will
range in the 40s.
The record·bigb temperature for
Ibis date at the Columbus weather
station was 62 degrees in 1933
while the record low was -14 in
1989. Sunset tonight will be at 5:11

The following cases were and $250 of fine suspended upon
resolved Wednesday in the Meigs completion of residential treallllent
County CouJ:( of Judge Patrick H. program; speed, $100 plus costs;
O'Brien.
Larry E. Powell, Letart Falls, DUI,
Fined were: Scott A. Icenhower, $500 plus costs, I 0 days jail sus·
Langsville, sear belt , $25 plus pended to three days, 180--day OL
costs; Billie J. Cunningham, suspension, one year probation. jail
Pomeroy, speed, $30 plus costs; and $250 of fine suspended upon
Glen D. W~rry . Pomeroy, driving completion of residential treallllent
under the mfluence, $750 plus program· fictitious regislration $10
· costs ~th $500 f~eited to Meigs_ plus cosis:
'
County Court Jail Fund, 30 days : Robert A. Hayes; Syracuse ,
jai~ suspended to 10 days with
DUI, $500 plus costs, JO days jail
opuoo of bouse arres~ one ~ear OL suspended to three days, 180-day
suspensiOn_, one ~ear probation~ 90· OL suspension, one year probation,
?ay vehicle. tmmobthzatiOn; jail and $250 of fine suspended
unproper baclcmg, costs only;
upon completion of residential
. Cletus T. Hardn, Ru_tl~d, seat u-eallllent program; failure to drive
!Jell, $2_5 plus costs; Kristin John· within marked lanes, costs only;
son, Mtddleport, speed, $30 plus Deborah L. Maynard, Proctorville,
costs; Vt ctor Counts, S~racuse , speed, $25 plus costs; Bryan C.
speed. $30 plus costs; Sheila Wha· Gheen, Racine, driving under sus~y. Shade, ~peed, $30 plus costs;
pension, $100 plus costs, three
Charles Adkms, South Shade, Ky., days jail and $50 o_f the fine sus·
speed, $30 plus costs: Dwayne D . pended if valid OL presented with
llriddy, Midd!epoit, seat belt, $15 60 days;
plus costs; Della I. Casteel,
Terry Singer, Lancaster, carry·
Pomeroy, DUI, $500 plus costs, ing a concealed weapon, $100 sus·
$500 for~eaure to !&gt;fetgs Cou~ty pended, costs, one year probation,
Court.,Jall Fund, stx mon~bs Jatl fO days jail suspended to three
S!JS_pended to 30 days wHb th e days, forfeiture of weapon; Todd
opuon o~ bouse arres~ one yearOL D. Eads, Rutland, assault, $170
suspellston,_ two years_ ~robauon , plus costs, $200 forfeiture to Meigs
180-day vebtcle unmobiltzaUon;
Coun ty Court Jail Fund, one year
Tonya Jewell, Rutland, dtsor- probation, 30 tlays jail suspended
derly conduct, $100 suspended, to 1o· Ronald E. Dodderer
costs, restraining order issued ; Reeds~ille fictitious plates cos~
Glen F. Young Jr., Racin_e,_ DUI, only.
'
'
$500 plus costs, 10 days J81l sus·
Forfeiting bond was John C.
pended to three days, 180-day OL
syspension. one year probation. jail Moore, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
speed, $70, and seat belt, $45.

&gt;

wbo started this new game, but tbe
conservatives soon discovered that
two could play at it. They have got·
ten so good that thoughtful liberals;
who had only wanted to impeach a
president or two and desUlly a cou·
pie of Supreme Court nominees;
are now seriously beginning to feiu
for the foundations of the republic.
As well they might. What gues:
around comes around - or, in the)
words of an older saying, those'
who live by the sword perish by the;
sword. But I see no easy way for
this nation.to reuaoe Its steps. Hav-:
ing flushed decency and restrain·r
and a saving sense of proportion:
(along with much else) down the'
toilet, our liberal media are comingto value some of the uses of that" hypocrisy'' they once were so"
quick to scorn.
Wllllam Rusher Is a Dlslln·
guished Fellow of the Claremont'
Institute for lbe Study of Stale(-'
manship and Political Phlloso•:
phy.
(For Information on bow to'
communicate eledronlcaUy with·.
Ibis columnist and others, con·
tact America Online by calUng 1.0:
800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
·

embraced this fantasy, it still was
only a fantasy. The truth is, we are
in our current state of unhappiness
and unrest not because we have P\!t

George R. P/agenz

w~.~j:lp.rs, no: be said. 'Hasn't o~~v::!:v~41;7t!xg;~~t~~

.r

n·a·u·g·h·t-y
I

To
· day •. n hl•s'tory
I

.,

!
.l
- ~

been a crime commiUed in the city poor performance on sm, forgettmg
~
aU day. I'm jusrhere to give direc· ihat after sin, the world and the
.
lions if anyone needs thelil.'
devil have done their worst, each of
. On thil date:
.
·
·
In 1783, Clecrge Washingtoo reslgpcd u c:om"'&amp;&amp;l'kT·iiKhlcf of die
"All along, it seemed. the Ul!U· us is still left with a deep reservoir
ble with the-~ bad never been of goodness aDd vinue that is large· - Atmyllldredred tolllallomutMoultt VerDI,lll, VL
1
with its people. It always bad been · ly untapped by most of us.
. In 17tl8, Marylllld \'Ofed Ill cede alOO.ICIQII'Oolllile- for tile lell ot·l
its elected officials. Now that tbey
How do we tap ·this bidden the ... doNI soveriilldlt; alJod t.wo-dllnla ol the - bCl! aue the (JICICDI- ,
had c:hanged. everYtbins was fmal· source? For some years I bave,, rec- day DilllktofColumbla. :
.
.
·1
Jy all right again."
OIIWiended that each Of US fOllOW a I Jn 180.5, JOICpll Smilb Jr~ f~ of Jlle MCJrmoo QIUJdl, W8S btXD UU ·
Although a lot of peo~le ·daily self-improvement regimen I Sharon, Vl

,

' The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 213-960)

1

Published every aftern oon. Monday through
FridDy, Ill Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio, by the
Ohio Valley Publhhing CompanyfMu ltimedia
Inc .. Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769. Ph . 992·2 156.
Second class postage pnid al Pomeroy, Ohio.

''Soy

Lo~ WHh

· Flowers From!"

POMEROY
FLOWER SHO,P

By CHRIS BIRD
Associated Press Writer
GROZNY, Russia - Russian
jets and helicopters bombed and
strafed the burning Cbeehen capital
today, while Grozny's remaining
residents tried to flee the city.
. Some stopped to bury their dead.
Numerous casualties were
reported in the second straight day·
light raid on the capital of the separatist republic. Black smoke bil·
lowed over tbe city, and roads were
paclced with cars leaving Grozny.
Russian news reports said Presi·
dent Boris Yeltsin was dismayed
with the operation, which bas faced
strong resistance in Chechnya 3J!d
overwhelming public opposition in
Moscow, and has divided the kussian military.
The military operation, the
largest since the invasion of

Candlelight service
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will celebrate a candlelight
service at 7 p.m. Sunday. Worship
services will be held at 10:30 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Special service
The Faith Full Gospel Church at
Long Bottom will have a special
service at 7 p.m. Friday (tonight) at

Units of the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service
answered four calls for aid Thnrsday. Units responding included:
MIDDLEPORT
2:17 p.m., Overbrook Nursing
Center, Frank Young, Holzer Med·
ical Center.
POMEROY
4:35am., Union Avenue, Aoyd
Srewart. Vererans Memorial Hospi·

COLONY THEATRE
SUN. THRU THURS.

........

WU.T DISNIY PICTUall

THE

LION KING
ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
446-0923

-'---- .One.l'&gt;!liL............................c.. ....... ....... 181211:. _.
SINGLt COPY PRICE
Daily ..........._.............................~ .......... 3.5 Cents

Subsc:ribcn not desiring to pay the carrier muy
remit in advance direct to The Do.i ly Senti nel
on a three, sil or 12 monlh b.nsis. Credit will be
given carrier each week.

No sub!iocription by mai l permined in arens
where home carrier service is nvail11ble.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMklt Melp County
IJ W&lt;dls ...... ....................................... .... $2 1.84
26 WeekJ ................................................. $43. 16
l 2 WeekJ____ ..... --··--·--·---·-···--···-····--· ....$84.76
R.ttt Ouu kle Meip County
13 WeekJ ................................................. $23.40
26 WeekJ...
...... ····'·-···--·-·-··-··-· .... S4l .l0
sz w~ ................................................. saa.40

tal.
RUTLAND
7:50 p.m., Meigs Mine 31
Salem Portal, Rick Hatfield, HMC.
SYRACUSE
3:22p.m .. Yellowbush Road,
Helma Jackson, treated at the
scene.

WASHING10N (AP) - Three Joseph Maggio, 36, of Annapolis, 1
men were arrested in separate inci· Md. He was oommiUed to a bospi- 1
:
dents around the Wbite House on tal for observation.
In an earlier incident, a inan car- l
Thursday and early today, including a man who said there was a rying a gun was arrested about 2 1
bomb in bis car, U.S. Park Police a.m. on the Ellipse, an open p:ut:
and the Secret Service said.
between the south grounds of t1Je.i
Another man was arrested early White House and the Washington I
today near tbe White House on Monument grounds.
:
That man "was seen skulking
•I
charges of carrying an illegal
. .. .
firearm. And a third man whom the around and stopped for suspiCIOUS '
Secret Service said wafted onto activity. They palled him down and J
White House grounds wben a gate found a gun ," the Park Police's ,
was opened briefly was arrested Keenan said.
Thursday evening and charged with
unlawful entry.
No one was hurt in any of the
incidents and law enforcement officials said that none of the episodes
Am Ele Power ........................33 l/4
Alao ..............................................U
was . viewed as a threat again st
.Uhland ou ............................34 3111
President Clmton, who was in the
AT&amp;T .....;..,............................51 l/4
While House through all three~
i­
dents.
· Bank One ............................... .l5 3111
Bob l!vans ............................... 19 711
The arrests are the latest in a
Cbaniplon Ind....................... .28 'J/4
spate of bizarre attacks and inci·
Charming Shop ........................6 Ill
dents at the White House over the
City Holdlag .................................lt
past few months.
Federal MOKul ........................ll 111
The man who claimed to have a
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................... .33 111
bomb drove a car up to near the
K·mart ....................................13 l/4
Lands l!nd ..... .......................... - ..14
Wbire House fence, jumped out of
Limited lnc. ............................18l/l
the car, and was chased down by a
Multjmoclla Inc. .....................17 'J/4
park police officer and a uoifonned
.............................. 1!1
Polntlftancorp
officer of the Secret Service, said
Rollan&lt;e Electric ....................30 'J/4
Sgt. Michael Keenan of the Park

Stocks

Police.
The man was apprehended in
the Washington Monument parlcing
area following a chase shortly
before 3 a.m., he said.
"The guy said there was an
explosive device in the car,"
Keenan said. "There wasn •t. "
The car was parked along the
street that run s past the south
grounds of the White House.
"He was very disoriented, he
basically bad no clue where he
was. He expressed no interest in
the While House,'· said Secret Ser.
vice spokesman Cunis Eldridge.
The man was identified later as

Robbins &amp; Myen .........................17
Royal Dutch ................................107
Shonoy's Inc . ................................13
Sbr Bank ................~ .................... .36
Wendy lnt'l . .......... ........ ......... 14 l/4
Worthington lnd ................... .lG l/4

-·-·-

Stock reports are the 10:30 un.
quot es provided by Advett ol
GaiUpolls.

Army aids search
(Continued from Page 1)
department recently received serial
numbers· for the rifles from the
Department of the Army Logistics
Support Branch. The serial num·
bers have been inserted into a
national computer wbich will as.dst
officers if the rifles are found, be
commenred.
Soulsby said the World War 1- ·
era battle rifles ~ used primarily
for rituals, including funerals and
parades.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pomero~. OH.

204 Condor Sl

FALL &amp; WINTER HOURS
CLOSED., MONDAY
.
TUE.·FRI. 9:()0.5:00;
SAT. 9:0G-12:00

,..1

GRAVELY

SYSRM

l,,._

• ' .1:

·:·

~&amp;m~~f
,.,

Thank you for your patronage
throughout the past year. We
hope to continue to serve you
in the holiday spirit all during
the new year.

. . , . . . U • . , lltollr;o!O 0 1.:-T

flU . 1:00 , ·~:30
SAT . l : OO, V:JO
SU!f , 7 :00 , 9:30
MC&gt;It . - THURS.

J:I S, 1 :00 , 5:30
•

I

I '

:

I

I

LION KING

!

DROP lONl

290 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT

STAJIT"S S UM . OEC l~ " L.I'M'U' WONEN"
•oi S NEY' ! • JuttGLI! BOOk"

Gen CER11FtCAT£S AVAilABLE!

HOUDAY HOURS

It's Starting To Look

(LOS ED
FRIDAY, DEC. 23

(614) 992-6454.
(800)433-6203

IND

SATURDAY,

POS"J"MASTER: Send address corrections 10
'Ole Daily Sentinel. Ill Court St .. Pomeroy,
Oh.io 45169.

...$ 1.60
.. ...... .......... $15.9.5

Christmas Eve service
.
The
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church will have a
Christmas Eve candeligbt service
starting at 7 p.m. Tbe public is
invited.

'UIIIIIIlllllllll.'

New spa~r Associntion.

One w~ k ... ,................
One Montll ...............

the church. Dave Dailey will be the
preacher. Sunday service will be
held at 9:30 a.m. and there will be
no evening service.

Squads respond to 4 calls

Member: Tbe As~ociate&lt;l Press. and the Ohio

SUBSCRIPTION M TES
By Carrier or MotOr ifoole

Afghanistan 15 years ago, has
prompted mutinies and resignations . Defense Minister Pavel
Grachev this week reportedly dismissed five generals and assumed
direct control of Chechen operations, although military officials
deny the reports.
Yeltsin was working on a plan
to end tbe crisis peacefully, his
press S\!rvice said. But Moscow
also clearly was pushing to reassen
full control over the republic,
which declared independence three
years ago.
The Russian government
claimed its ground forces bad
encircled Grozny, but the main
road out of the city to the east was
open today. Chechen fighters were
seen along tbe rocket-battered
highway for miles.

Meigs announcements

I 06 Butternut Ave. Pomeroy, OH

DEC. 24

GENESIS
BIBLE STUDY CLASS
Ever:y Sunday Morning

Oam-: 1•--..-- --~II=
Ash Street
Freewill
Baptist Church
~,

Middleport, Ohio ·
G.R.Q.C. Accredited
Diplomas Offered.

A Lot Like Christmas...
And we bope the spirit stays wltb you all year long.

ALsO, WE DE IEmll READY FOR OUR
IIIDnC YEO-Ill CLEAIIIE LOT SAUl
Ill IIIJAY'I Nl'fl IOiflfAF JWSI

992-7410
•

'Jbank you for your valued_patronoge!

South Second

Shear IUusions

~ .John &amp; Crystal Hood

M'ddl
1

1

c~n ·

Susan Jenkins
Trudy Marshall
Paula Butcher
Elizabeth Smith
Lois Eblin

Teacher Les Hayman

, I

••

Grozny residents bury dead
as Russians press ·attacks

e.

Hospital news
VEJ'ERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions - none.
Tht~rsday discharges - Rick
McChristian, Pomeroy.

have called "Lindy's 59." I copied building is' out of style today. It is ~
it out of a 1930 magazine I found true that William Bennett's "Book :·
in the library.
of Virtues" bas elevated virtue to
According to the article, Charles best-seller status today. 1be Ulluble ;
Lindbergh as a young man would is that while we agree that lack of .:
go down a list of 59 traits every virtue is responsible for society' s :
nildl~ before bed and grade himself troubles, we usually don't mean :
our faith in the wrong group o( on each trait. The list included sucb our own lack of virtue, but some- :
Find:
politicians, but because we as indi· qualities as cheerfulness, persever- body else's.
.
viduals lost faith in our own finer ance, no fault-finding, politeness
"Lindy's 59" or any other self· :
0
powers.
and self-oonUlll.
improvement program makes char; i
0
In the late 19th century and the
Next to the traits he had fulfilled acter building - and therefore the 1
early years of this century the put- satisfactorily he would put a red X, quality of life we enjoy - a matrer i
pits of America protlaimed t!!e !he story said. Those he failed to of personal responsibility for :
"perfectibility of man." That live up to he would mark with a everybody.
· i
mankind could bring .,tbe kingdom blact X.
Geor11e Plalgenz is a syndical· !
J
f-:-----·~--,----t-~=-J-H----cJ~~-~--~rlfF-~~'=ll---1---1~-~_;;t;,le·. -'-'Strangers~of~all-races_of.fiod on earth was seen as a dis- _ Even u:,ough, in a letter to me ed writer for Newspaper Enter· i
cheerily greeted one another." tinct possibility.
shorilfbC ore he illCCI,l:lifdbeigli~prtse-AIIociltlion. - · · · · · ·" l
Civility in aU forms had returned.
Two world wars and a debilitat· disavowed any connectioti with the
(For Information on bow to !
"The cop around the comet was ing Depression destroyed most of list, I have continued to publish it communicate electronically wllb j
whistling a happy tune, twirling his that faith which may have been on occasion, often as a Lenren dis· Ibis columnist and others, con· 1
nightstick and surveying the pass· unwarranted to begin with. But if cipline.
tact America OnBne by calling 1· ·
ing pedestrians. I asked him if he onoe we bad expected too much of 1 Self-imprQv~ment or character 800-827-6364, ext. 8317.)
_:

p.m. and sunrise Saturday at 7:51
a.m.
Weather rorecast:
Today ... Variable cloudiness
west. .. Otberwise partly sunny.
Areas of dense fog north and west.
Highs fmm the mid 40s north to
the lower 50s south.
Tonigbt. .. Becoming mostly
cloudy. Lows in the lower to mid
30s.
Saturday ... Variable cloudiness.
Highs in the 40s.
Extended forecast:
Christmas Day ...Dry. Lows in
the 30s and highs in the 40s.
Monday and Tuesday ... Fair.
Lows in the upper 20s to middle
30s. Highs in the middle 40s to
around 50 Monday, and lower to
middle 50s Tuesday.

Meigs County Court

An old-fashioned New Year's regimen
The kind of year that 1995 will
tum out to be for us is up to yon
and me_ not the GOP.
The thing that is happening in
our country - an erosiop of the
quality of life .:.... is not something
that wiD be changed by a sbala:-up
in Congress.
Columnist !ll!b Greene wrote a,.
satire tbe day after the election that
made fun of the euphoria that
swept through the land - or large
parts of if - when the election
'returns were announced.
· "The next day the streets were
filled with bappy people," Greene

I

JIY The Associated Press

case

Liberals' war on hypocrisy bites back
share of the consequences of the
wholesale collapse of standards of
decency engineered by our liberals
in tbe name of eliminating

Betty "Joann" Hendrickson, 60, of Mason, W.Va., died Thursday, Dec.
22, 1994 at St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkersburg, W.Va.
· Borll June 19, 1934 in Wheeling, W.Va, sbe was a daughter of the late
William V. and 1\uth Harris Roush. She was a 1952 graduate of Wahama
High School and was a secretary for many area businesses.
She is survived by her husband, Frank "Buddy" Hendrickson of
Mason; a son and daughter-in-law, ·Bruce and Reta Hendrickson of
Mason; a daughter and son-in-law, Becky and Jeff 1.erlde of Mason· five
grandchildren; brother and sisrer-in-law, Frank and Hazel Roush of 'Lake
Cba:les, La; brothers-in-law and sisters·in·law, Janet Booth of Radford,
Va., Jerry and Roberta Gunn of East Point, Ga., Ann Cox of Pasadena,
Md., and Jacqueline and Harold Miller of Bluefield, Va.
Servl~s wi~l be I p.m. Tuesday in the Foglesong Funeral Home,
Mason, With TIDlothy Vaughan and Randy Wimmer officiating. Burial
will he in Graham Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral home Mon·
day from 6-9 p.m.

afford excessive delays," the GSA
memo stares.
At times it appears as though the
GSA also bad to cope with judicial
temper tantrums over the issue of
"operable windows." The build·
ing s design did not envision windows that open and close because
of.GSA' s safety and energy conservation standards.
But .the judges overruled GSA.
At a 1991 meeting bet,een GSA
officials and judges, one JUStice bri·
died at the bureaucmts: "I will not
give up the operable windows! J
will go to (George) Bush if I have
lo."

The Dally Sentinel Plgl 3

--Area death-~-­ Three -men arrested·
Betty Hendrickson
near White House
iI
.

OHIO Weather

•

Pig&amp;--2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
friday, Decef!I!Je.r 23, 1994 ·

.

.

Pomeroy-Middlepoit, Ohio

f

�Sports

J'be Daily ~!eL~e
'

..

Point Pleasant hands yisi~ing Meigs Marauders 59-50 loss .~~
By DOUG HOST
OVP Stall' Writer
The Point Pleasant Big Blacks
bounced bad from their first loss
of the season with an effiCient 59·
50 triumph over the Meigs
Marauders.
Tlle Big Blacks shot 53% from

C
,.
• •I
,;;;SS&amp;efn
91f1S
Eastern outsCOred Wellston 4().
26 in the second half en route to a
74-49 Tri-Valley Conference win
over tbe Golden Rodcets Thtmday
night in girls' bigb ~cbool basket.
ball action at Eastern High School.
Gaining several points off the
fast break, Eastern (5-2 overall and
3-2 in the TVC' s Hocking Divisio(\) placed eight players in the
scoring column. Capitalizing on the
break in the fourth quarter was
Rebecca Evans, who tallied 13
points in the frame. for a gamehigh 22 points and eiKbt rebounds.
Sophomore Patsy Aeiker found the
post to her liking, notching a
career -bigh 17 points and grabbing
12 rebounds.
Jessica Karr bad just nine
points, as Wellston did a good job

the flooc and 40% from three point
range during the nine point win.
"We got in foul trouble and bad
to go to a zone, which helped us in
the second half," said Point Pleasant coach Lennie Barneue. "They
seemed to still want to get the ball
inside in the second baJf, and I

The Marauders slqlped up lhel{
defense at the start of the fourlh 1
quarter as they forced Point Pleas)
ant into offensive fouls !Ill its fust'
three possessions. Still, Meigs was
only able to manage a ~ne poin.l '
advantage during that span.
, .' '
The Marauders diil everythlnt,
IAI
they could to get .back into the:
•&amp;,
.
rre
TbeMara~ersfollowed~ithan game as they managed to beat
.
8-0 run of tbelf own to regam thelf Point Pleasant on the offensive
doubling up the junior-guard, but cashing in on eight of her t 2 and Billena Bucbanan's. one. Well- three point lead. Back-to-hack boards in tbe final period. Clelancfl
she played a part in 24 other points fourth-period points. Evans and ston was led by S. Holtz and A. layups by Travis Abbott and Benny grabbed four offensive tebounds~
as she collected 12 assists.
Aeiker .were credited with great Lyons with six each.
·
Ewing capped the Meigs surge.· ·
all by himself.
'
Wellston was led by sophomore games in·tbe paint.
-•-•-•The final moments of the half
The Big Blacks did not see~
Mandee Argabright. who notched a
Eastern bit 33-70 from tbe floor,
Wellston
swayed back and forth witb Point bothered by Meigs' extra opportu·
tc:am·~igh 19_points, and Dana Ste- all twos, had 38 rebounds (Aeiker
(12-11-14-12=49)
capturing the advantage and a one .nities though, since Point's ~ffen~'
vason s 12.
12, Evans eight and Nelson seven),
Mandee Argabright 8-0-3=19, point lead at tbe buzzer.
was running smoothly. Oliver con•'
Eastern blitzed to a 20-12 .first bad 10 steals (Karr four) , 26 Alicia Wyatt4-0-1=9, Andrea Mar"I thought there were two rea- nected on a couple of post movei
penod lead, then-led by 15 early in turnovers, 25 fouls and 18 assists.
lin t -0-0=2, Nikki Downey 3-0- sons we won Ibis ball game," said for tbe Big Blacks and Bue~anav
the second canto. Eastern then
Wellston
hit 19-71, includ- t =7. Dana Stevison 3-0-6= t 2. Bameue. "One, was our rebounding drove through the lane for a' laYIIP\
cooled down _as Wellston cut the ing 0-4 treys, was 1t -32 at the line, Totals: 19 -0-1113l=49
in tbe second half, and the second Meigs was inching closer tboug"lead to 30-23 m the second period. bad 32 rebounds Jed by
was our patience on offense. We The lead was down to si* wilhjUSJ
EHS !ed 34~23 at tbe_ half.
Argabright's tO, bad t 5 steals, t 7
Eastern
wanted to improve in those areas at over two minutes left.
,;
Wath Aei)u:r leading tbe way in turnovers, nine assists (Argabright
(l0-14-19-l1=74)
the half, and the kids did a real
Stewart came back for Poinl
the third quarter, Evans, Karr, Nel- four) and 19 fouls.
Melissa Guess 1-0-0=2, Amy good job."
Pleasant after taking an inboundS'
son, Radford. and Rc:&lt;~ovianjumped
. Eastern is idle until January 5.
Redovian 3-0-2=8, Jessica Karr 4Point started the second half pass from Holstein for one basket.,
on tbe 19-pomt sconng bandwagon
Reserve notes: Eastern won 49- 0-1 =9, Jessica Radford 3-0·0=6, with a 7-0 run, that would help the and grabbing a pass from Dorsey in·
as Eastern rol!ed to a 53-37 \ally.
24 led by Crystal Holsinger's 13, Nicole Nelson 4-0-0=8, Rebecca Big Blocks stay in (he lead for the tbe post before knockin$ in a soff1
Substllutmg freely,_ Eastern Tracy White's tO, Beth Bay's nine, Evans 10-0-2=22, Patsy Aeiker 8- remainder of tbe game. Matt Was- jumper off the glass. Tb~ lead was;
coasted to the 74-49 wm. Karr, Michelle Caldwell's eight, Crystal 0-1=17, Crystal Morris 1-0-0=2. sel ignited the scoring burst with cut to five on Stanley's three-pointNelson, Radford and Redovian all Morris' six, Martie Holler' s two Totalsi''34-0·61ll=74
two three-pointers. Then Wassel er, but Meigs couldn't get any clos-.
worked the fast brealc, wuh Evans
answered the Marauders' flfst score er.
.
'
thought we Jlllllllled thmgs up pret·
ty well. They're a good team. They
beat R1ver Valley. They beat
Athens, b~t I thought our kids did a
real good JOb. They settled down in
the second half and got jn the right
places."
The inside game was key to the

• h OVe!"
nof(;h 40 -"6 tr1ump

Marauders' strong start. Meigs'
Gary Stanley bad two offensive
rebounds, which Jed to easy bas·
kets, in the early going. Stanley
also added two first-quart.er free
throws to help tbe Marauders grab
a 17-14 lead at the end of tbe quarter.

/lS f on

~e~~~~-age~t~~~:~:::~e~

Meigs girls record 31-30 victory over Alexander
By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Meigs slipped past Alexander
31-30 in a non-conference girls'
basketball action Wednesday
evening at Meigs High School,
according to a: report submitted
today.
Botb teams are now 4-3 on the
season. The teams will meet again
on Jan. 19 at Alexander in a game
that will count as a conference
game.
Meigs jumped out to an early 84 lead after one. period behind
Vanessa Comspton wbo scored six
farst period points. Mei.Rs increased

the lead to 17-12 at the.balf behind
a balanced scoring attack, Laura
Eas_tma_n and Taryn Doidge Jed
Me1gs m the second period with
three points each.
Misti Markins sparked the Lady
Spartans in the third period with
five of ber team's 12 points, as
Alexander pulled to within 26-24 at
the end of three periods.
Both teams were able to manage
only a field goal each in tbe fourth
period, Alexander stayed close
from the line bitting four of six,
while Meigs could only connect on
three of eight. However, Meigs was

able to bold on for tbe win.
Compston led the Marauders
with 10 points. The Marauders hit
12 of 44 from the field for 27% and
seven of 16 frilm the line for 44%.
Tbe Marauders bad 24 rebounds,
with Easbnan grabbing eight.
Misty Markins Jed Alexander
with nine points and 1'2 of ber
team's 45 rebounds.
Reserve nofes: Alexander
slipped past Meigs 27-24. Bobbi Jo
Davis led Alexander with 12
points. Candace Miller led Meigs
with six.
-•-•-•-

Alexander
rebound and put back cut the Point
(4-8-12-6=30)
Pleasant lead to 41·33 at tbe end of
Iamie Andrews 1-0·3=5, Bobbie three quarters.
Jo Davis 1-l-0=5, Joann Blair 1-0"Basketball is a game of runs,
0=2, Jenny Merkle 2-0-1=5. Andi and that one to open the third was a
Rolston 2-0-0=4, Misty Markins 4- big help to us," said Barnette.
0-1=9. Totals: 11·1-5::30

Basketball
NBA standings
Atlooll&lt;.._

~· W2

Ill

- Ieney ............12 u .444
.,.,....................... 10 14 .417

a.s

&amp;':d. . . . . . . . . JJ
-

Y•k .............. l2

PltUodelplllo ............. 8

MJomj .................... ..7

Woohlqtoa .............6

II

16

1l
16

.522

6.5

.9

.333
318
.273

II

II
12

Ball St. 88,1nditl.li:a St. 80
BCIWiiDJ Orccn ~9. Ohio St. SO
. Cent. Michl&amp;an 88, Cadinli Strilcll l 6
Cleveland St 84, Kent 70
DI .-Oiicago 89, Owaia Southern 73
Iowa St. 114. North Florida 10
Kansas 71, Rice S7
Michiaan 87, J~bon St. IH
Miuouri 76, llllaoia!il
Nebnuka 95, N. Iowa 88 (0'1')
Nf?llc Dame 57, St. Bonaventure 54
S. llliooiJ I02, Mo. Southern 47
Toledo 6S . Indianapolil S7
W. Michipn 79, Detroit n
WiJ .•Qreen Bay 75, Mit l. Valley St.

Sl

C..oroiDI""'"'
IDJioao .... :..............ll 7 .682
CIJ!VI!LANJ) ....... I6 I .667
.14 10 513
Cbkoao..................ll 11 .478
llol!oli. .......... ..........9 ll .409
~ .................. 10 ll .400
MU-.... ..........7 16 .30-4

Southwest

a..-.......... ...

2

4.5

6
6.5
8.5

Col.- St 86, Aro- St 64

- SO\Ilhet11 Moth. 81, North Teua74

FarW•t ·
~na St. 72,

Otlahon St. 69

Oonz.aaa 61, E. W•binatoa51
MooLilla St. 74, Colorodo 12
W•hiopm 71, Okl Dominion 61

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mld....ODioWoo

lil:'
. . . . . . . ... . JJ \
Houlton .............. .14 8
Doll . ................... 12
S..AIItonio .......... l2
Dellwt ................... l2
r.~;.- ................l

9
9

10
19

~.

.636
.571
.l71
.545

.201

-1&gt; ..................

(

1
)

iii
2
3.5
3.l
4
12

Ohio men's

college scores
TouroameJila
M e - U..llalt4oJ ~'

Clo_ploo...
Wlllsh 85, We.tminJtcr, h . 77

Thlrd oloce
Mount U.nion 106, llwnber 9S

Podll&lt;niYidoft
18 6 .7l0
· Sallle .................... l6 7 .696
LA. Loan ............ I.
I .636
--... ............ 13 10 .565
fortiUd ................. ll 10 .524
Ooldea s...............9 ll .37l
LA. Cllppcno ........... 3 21 .12l

.

Col. South 47, Lakewood-%
Col. Wcathmd 69, M.-ion Hudlna66
Coldwllor 84. U1111 Blllh 7l'
Croobville 70, Pbllo 64
Fayette 97, A.ntwup 12
Gatca Mills Oilrmur 61. Burton Bcrt-

1.5
3
4.5
l .5
9
ll

Thunclay's soor•

CLEVt!LAND 93, New York 90
a..IOIU 103, 1'1\jledelphia 91
Utah 103, AIJanta 94
HOUIIOD 114, PhoeniJ; l06
SeottJe 103. Dollao 101
QCiklea State 107, Wa~hinpoa &amp;7
SICtiRICnto 109. MiaDCIOta 89

Tonlchl's pmes
Pbilldt.lphla II: BCIIOD, 7:30p.m.

shire62
Holptel3, Archbold l2

Indian River-66 , Willoo 62
Ledaemoat S2, VIctory Chr. 42
Lcip~ic S7, Pa&amp;rk:k Henry 46
Lisbon Buver 72, Columbiana
; • Cm:tvlew 66
Matti Ill Ferry 68, B~rneaville 52
Maumee II, Tot. Roaen 47
McDooaJd S8, Lord.Jtowo 39
Monroeville 76, Danbury 62
M«pn 67, Sheridan ll
New Albany 77, Tree of Lire S2
New Wilminatoo, Pa. 45, Warren
Kennedy40
New•k 62, Col. Independence 61
New•k Cad1. 71, JohDatown 66
0ran8oSI, PaTy 41
Poinl Plcuant, W.Va. 59, Meip SO
Reynoldlbura 66, Thomas Worthina·
lon!i7
River View 5 I. New l..elinaton 44
Smilhville 10, E. Canloa61
Sprioa. Catbolic 7l , Day. Ctuillian 67
Steubenville 49, Cambridae 47
Teays ,I, Adena 32
Triad 73, S. Cflarleatoo Southeastern
12
Triway 63, Wa)'Jledale 36
Upper Arliog,ton 53, Co l. Linden·
McKinley44
W. Jetrmoo 43, Hamilton Twp. 42
Weirton, W.Va. 66, Raylaod !luckeye

44

MUWtc... Coltto

Chrl.bn• T&lt;MII'IUIIMal
Cb. .pioaohlp
MaJone 12, Mllliioawn61
ThlnlpiXalamuoo, Midi. 60, Dc.oi10n 48

Ohio H.S. boys' seores
Beaver Local 72, Columbiaaa
Cre&amp;tYiew66
OJaarin Pal II 76, Oate1 Mllll Hawken
49
Cle. Ha)'CII], ae. AYiiUOD .0
. Clyde 12, Part Cliatoa 61 (0'1)
Col. Academy 92, Berne Uuion 70
Col. NorU!lutl 62, Col. DeS~eol1

;:~~3~.in~~~~~:;':~;

of
team we were in the fir'sI two:
weeks of the seaSon," said Meig$'
coach Jeff Skinner. "We are plily-'1
ing absolutely no defense wbatso "
ever. We arc getting beat off the l
(See MARAUDERS on P1111e S&gt;.

Meigs
(11-9-9-5=31)
Amber Blackwell 2-0-2=6,
Laura Eastman 1-0-2=4, Anne
Brown 3-0-0=6, Vanessa Compston 5-0-0=10, Kristen Dassylva 00-1 =I, Taryn Doidge 1-0-1 =3 .
Totals: 12·0·7::31

Scoreboard
Mldl"est

The Big Blacks stormed bad at
the start of the second as B.J.
Buchanan took a swing pass from
J.D. Holstein and nailed a threepointer to tie things. Iamie Stewart
added a free throw, and Holstein
found Mark Oliver in the post~ a
turnaround jumper before Meigs
gotontbeboardagain.

Bridgeport 42. Beausvme 40

But if you carry an ATM card with one of these ~ymbols ...

84&amp;-=. :me f~ .

1

you have.24-hour access to your accounts
every day of the year at our SuperTeHer machines.

Olippewl92, Rittman 30

Cin. Lockland 66, New Miami $1
Cin. Mtrcy 62, NotreDamt. Ky. 41
Cia. Mount H'calthy 57 , Cin. Northwest 56
Cin. Princeton S9. Cin. Sycamore 43
Cin. Plrccll MariUI 53, Norwood 34
Cin. Wwern Hilll70, Cin. Woodward
39
Oaymont 40, Coahocton 39
ae. Hay 70, Garfield Hu. 31
Oe. Heighll 76, Cle. Glenville 22
Oe. Kennedy Sl,Mentor 41
Oe. VAIS182, Oe. St. AURU&amp;Une 42
Continental44, Leipsic 33
D1nville 72, Hcbrom Llktwood 32
Day. Chaminade-Julienne 67 , Col.
Wa\lersc n 35
Day. Stebbins 44, Ony. Quistian 37
Dclpbo5 Jefferson 62 , Miller City 57
Dover61 , Meadowbrook.33
E. Kno&amp; SO, Jonathan Alder 45
Ea&amp;tcrn Brown $4, W. Union 36
Eastwood 88, Elmwood '43

Marietta Downtown Office, Second &amp; Putnam Streets

Frontier Office, Frontier Shopping Center
Kroger Office, Washington Center
Second &amp; Scarnmel Sts. Drive-up
Belpre 1902 Washington fltlulevard

Ohio H.S. girls' scores
Adena 45 , Lnaan Elm 36
Akron Mancheatcr S8, Latham
ern 49
Arnherll!iO, Midview 21
Arcanum 46 , Tri-County N. 31
Arlington 61, Kenton 38
Athera 64. Jackson 31
Avon Lake 46, Bcrlin Hiland 45
BellcfDntainc 57, Orecnon 42
Bellevue 10, Sandusky 46
Belpre 82, Hemlock Mil_ler 29

W~t-

·IILE--,1

L...---

1&amp;?-f:J'~I

IE_ I
I

11'~::' . . 1

. . W-$S~NGTON (AP) - B,Y
wposmg.a salary cap, baseball s
a~ may he paving the way for
l~gal battles with the players assocaation and possible congressional
interventjon.
: Talks ~tween the players and
o:wners ·broke down. Thursday
mght, and the owners IDiposed the
s,alary cap - leaving detai.ls for
tinion ~Donald ~ebr to pack up
¥ the tipnt.desk ofb1s hotel.
., Jilamng an unforseen ·and unex~ted .settlement. baseball players
V,:lll ll~ seen over the next few
month m courtrooms, not on sun·
(jrencbed ftel~. The camera crews
that converge on Florida and Ari·
7.003 ~March likely will view
~J!!acCment players along with any
~~ .~.uers who break~..- 'Qiis IS: a very frustraung and

No games Saturday
Sunday's games
ScanJe 11 Denver, 4 p.m.
Nnt York at Oticaao. 6:30p.m.

Major men's

college scores

Send In the folowlng coupon,
111d gat 2Q% ofl the
· aubecripllon price.

East
Bolto• CoU&lt;ae 13, llortCotd 71 (01')

Univ. 71,Harvwd63
.Niopnt72

RobetlMorrll51

Join Us As We Celebrate the Birth of
Our Savior

Special Holiday offer ends
December 31, 1994.

.
Christmas Day Services
Worship -Services 8:15a.m. &amp; 10:30 a.m.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.
i':J

-

Pnnrt Chvrdt Of Christ
Filth at Main
&gt;

I

"Wue men still seek Him"

the sport's antitrustexmlplion. e
Utah Republican Orrin Hatch,
who will chair the Senate Judiciary
Committee, said he would be COil·
cerned if tbe owners "bide behind
the antitru$1 exemption wbile
imposing their own conditions on
the players."
"I'd prefer not to have the
Congress enter into it, but the
antitrust exemption is an anomaly," Hate~ said. "Some people
think that if we just leave things
alone, the owners will break the
players union."
Incoming House S~r Newt
Gingrich, R-Ga., told ih&amp;e players
who live in his district that he was
interested in reviewing tbe antiuust
issue - even if a settlement was
reached.

,

Cavs beat Knicks; Bullets·and Hornets also claim victories

Jly WENDY E. LANE

Phills, who Jed the Cavs with 24
p~ints, put Cleveland up 8~-8~
wath 1:26 to play, the Cavalaers
first lead since. the game's early
minutes. New York came right
back with a three·p!li~ter from
John Starks before Wallaams muscled inside for bis basket
Tbe Knicks wasted their last
cbance to win when De~ Harper
was cal~e~ for an offensave f~ul
wbtle drivmg to the basket agatnst
Chris Mills with four seconds left.
Cleveland bas held its last eight
opponents to 90 or fewer points.
The Cavaliers, who have won II of
their last 14, broke a seven-game
losing streak to the Knicks.
"I'd like to think this is the bot·
tom," Harper said. "I'd like to
think we can only move up. We
start playing not to lose instead of
givin~ ourselves the oppolltmily to
win.'
There was S&lt;mC good news for
the Knicks, though.
Charles Oakley, who bad
missed the last four games because
of pain in his dislocated right toe,
returned and bad 19 points and 13
rebounds, although he was ptaying
in pain. The slumping John Starks
was 5-for-10 from the field, bit
three three-pointen and finished
with 17 points.
· Cavaliers coach Mike Fratello,
who bas bad to cope with myriitd
injuries among his players, understands the Knicks' frustration.
"1 It.ave tremendous respect for
what they've done here," he said.
"They come out and compete and
PlaY so bard. They dOOiioatm the
game in so many areas. We just
bad the good fcxtune to make some
rfu~in~.
shots at the end.''
"I
been on the coon in
Elsewhere, it was Washington
or three days, and in this. . 107, Golden State 87; Charlotte
ue you get rusty," be said. 't03,·Pbiladelphia 91; Utah 103,
I hit a shot or two I felt real Atlanta 94; Houston 114, Pboenix
106: Seattle 103, Dallas 101; and
Sacramento 109, Minnesota 89. .

NEW YORK (AP) - Playing
an overachieving defensive team
like the Cleveland Cavaliers was
~ list thing the struggling New
YorkKnil;ks needed.
The .Knicks lost a close one
Tuesday night and were wondering
what wai wrong with their backCourt shooting. All the same, they
!'lOked well on their way~ break·
IJ18 a three-game losin&amp; streak
Tbul'sday night- until Mark Price
starlillg1hilling three-pointers in the
fourth quarter.
· ~n the Kniclcs lost their lead
'tl! 1:26 remaining, they seemed
lose their confidence, too. lobn
illiams' baRk shot with 20 sec·
left gave tbC Cavaliers a 93·
victory and their seventh win in
row. ·
Pat Riley's team was outre~unded down the stretch, and its
.aunted defense couldn't stop
frice. who hit all four of his threeflint allf:lllpts in the fmal period.
1 "To me it's more mental than
ything else," Riley said. "You
ink you're trying, but you're not,
t enQUgb 10 shake yourself out of
"
Price missed his fourth straight
t because of bruised ribs and
yed just 12 minutes in the fust
ree quarters, during which tbe
&lt;;av·alie'rs went 1-for-8 from long
With his ribs still bandaged,
came in and played the entire
quarter, scoring 14 of his 19
·lfltnts. ~' · . ·
The Cavs, down by 16 points in
first half, m11de three threelf.l.intcrs in a row - the last two by
to pull to 84-83 with 3:10

B.J. Buchanan 5 pts., 2 rebs.,
3stls.: Tommy Dorsey 5 pts., 4
rebs.; Kris Gilley 2 pts., 3 rebs., 2
stls.: J.D. Holstein I reb., I stl .;
Mark Oliver 12 pts., 9 rebs.; Jay
Reymond 10 pts., 4 rebs., 2 stl.;
Jamie Stewart 17 pis., 3 rebs.; Matt
Wassel 8 pts., 8 rebs., I stls.
Totals: 1713l-4110-1~9
Rcbo1111cll.- 34
Tlarnovers - 11
Foula-20

-MEIGS

,_._._._
POINT PLEASANT

Gary Stanley 15 pts., 5 rebs.;
Cass Cleland 7 pts., 7 reba.; Paul
Pullins 5 pts., 5 rebs.; Ray Russell
2 pts.; Benny Ewing I pt., 2 reba.;
Donald Yost 2 pts.; Adam Hendrix
4 pts., 1 reb.; Travis Abbott 14 pts.,
4 rebs.; Brent Hanson 3 rebs.
Totals: 111143-llll-lllll=SO
Rebounds- 31
Turnoven-9
Fouls-20
Records: Point Pleasant (4-1);
Meigs (3·2)

Bulle1.1107, ~arrlors 87
Chris Webber made a painful
reDifn to Golden State.
Webber, playing his frrst game
against his old teain since his Nov.
1? trade to Wasbing~n, dislocated
bas left sboulder an Thursday
night's 107-871oss to tbe Warriors.
Last season's top rookie is
expected to be sidelined six to eight

W II t

f

h

e s on res men
beat Eastern 34 28
•

Wellston's freshman basketball
team, behind by one going into the

fourth quarter, outscored visiting
Eastern I 1-4 in prime time en route
to a 34-28 win Tbtmday night.
Af(er being outscored 10-6 in
tbe first quarter, Bryan Durst's
Eagles did the same to the Golfen
Roclcets in the second quarter, with
John Driggs' in-the-lane jumper
with 34 seconds left in the frame
creating a 16-16 tie that stood at
halftime.
Center Nathan McManus broke
the tie 57 seconds into the third
quarter, but the Eagles, starting
tbeir rally on Nick Spurlock's inthe-lane rainbow jumper that creal·
ed an 18-18 tie , pushed on until
they led 24-23 at the quarter's end.
The Eagles were plagued by
foul trouble in the last quarter,
which helped Wellston's frQnt-liners to get inside on layups before
they started going to the foul line in
the last minute to get tbe win.
McManus Jed all scorers with
14 points. Driggs led the Eagles
with 12. ·

weeks.
''I was definitely scared, but

I'm blessed and I'm young and
there's no reason for me to get

down," Webber said.
Hornel.l103, 76ers 91

Meigs junior high boys' cage teams sport 1-2 records
After the firSt three games of the
year the Meigs junior high boys'
baskelhall teams own 1-2 records.
Greg Deel's seventh-graders
opened tbe season with a 62-50 win
over Wahama. Steve Baba led
Meigs with a game high 2S points,
Murray added 15 . Gerlach led
~abama in the scoring column
With 18 pomts, wbtle E. Bamitz
added 15.
In the eighth grade contest. Ron
Drexler's eighth-grade Marauders
dropped a 41 ·40 decision to the

White Falcons. J.T. Humphreys led . points in tbe Second half. Jermaine
Meigs with nine points, Jerimiab ladson led Gallipolis with 18.
Bentley and Waylon McKinney
In a game against Point Pleasadded seven points each. Aaron ant, Meigs dropped ~ 42-29 contest
Scott led Wabama with 10 points.
in the seventh-grade game. Rollins
The Marauder seventh-graders led Point with 15 points and
dropped a 50-45 contest to Gallipo- Doeffinger added 10 for tbe winlis. Leach led Meigs with 15 points, ners . Bentley bad nine to pace
Abbott added 10. For Gallipolis, Meigs. McKinney added eight.
Cody Lane Jed the way with 16.
In tbe eighth-grade game Point
In the eighth grade game Bent- slipped past Meigs 35-32. Pyles led
ley poured in a game high 26 tbe winners with 18 points. Roush
points to lead Meigs to a 50-41 had nine to lea1 Meigs, while •
win . Bentley scored 19 of his Abbott added eight.

'ime Is Running Out!
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KC girls "op junior
high Tornadoes
Southern came within one point
in the final minutes of tbe game but
lost the match to Kyger Creek 4738.
Kimmy Sayre bad 28 points for
the Tornadoes, Bridget Cross four
and Stacy Lyons, Dena Sayre each
two. Dee Dee Swisher led the Bobcats with 18.
In other games, Southern defeat·
ed Southwestern 29-1 1. Sayre bad
eight, while Cross, Rebecca Wolfe
and Lyons each bad six. In a seesaw game against Federal Hocking,
Southern lost a close one 28-25 .
Wolfe had five steals and six
points, while Sayre had 12 and
Cross bad seven . .
Southern won its second game
against Vinton 43-20. Good teamwork saw almost every Tornado
score. Sayre bad 13 , Wolfe and
Lyons each bad eight. Cross bad
four, wbile Asbli Davis, Kara King.
Dena Sayre, Stacy Wilson and
Sarah Brauer each had two.
The Tornadoes lost to BidwellPorter for the second time this season, doing so Ibis time by a 40-13
margin. Once again, foul trouble
hampered the Tornadoes. Asblie
Dav1s scored five points , while
Cross bad four and Wolfe and
Sayre each bad two.

l)Ou are cortfia{[y invited to
qrace Cliurch as we cefe6rate
6irtli of Clirist.

(FRIDAY, DEC. 23)

UNTIL 11:00 P.M.!
REGISTER FROM 8:00P.M. TO 11:00 P.M.
FOR FREE GIFTS
- DIAMOND BRACELET (2 Diamond Bracelets Will BE Given Away - One At Each Store)

- 14K GOLD HERRINGBONE NECKLACE
TO BE GIVEN AWAY AT 11:00 P.M.
(2-14K Necklaces Will Be Given Away- One At Each Store)

OPEN SATURDAY, DEC. 24
8:30 A.M. UNTIL 4:30 P.M.
EXCELLENT SELECTION OF DIAMONDS
•Rings •Bracelets •Pendants

-lJ!ie cft.urcft. UJi{[ 6e gforious{y dressei ;o .. ·
li(Jnor the Christmas seas_on 'Wfiife ~ve~
carofs sountffrom tlie myjfi~ tJlarcR_ftofJ ·

,.

_ -~~ft :z~~r~iuf ~~[[oftra~ncense_·· _____

Christmas Eve CandleUght Communion
Dec.-24 ~-6:30-p.m.--- - .J

Boston Red Sox ~bier executive nary injunction against the cap in Series for the farst time since 1
The decision to Impose the cap
officer John Harnngton, head of federal court.
The cap eliminates salary
•· ' came after the owneo rejected a
the.~wn.ers' ne~otiating commi~;
"~~Is the road they want to tration and immediately creates a new offer from the players that
Th~s a;~ly as a sad day,
take, ~f this is where they wan~ to new group of 63 restricted free would bave imposed a 25 percent
Febr saad. It s regrettable, but I go, this Is going to he an ugly sllua- agents, including Jack McDowell payroll tax on teams that spent
am reasonably cenain the owners lion," Detroit's Cecil Fielder said.
Jim Abbott and Marquis Grissom' more than 160 percent of $60 milwill come to regret it - sooner
Fehr said owners notified tbe It also forces 21 teams to cut a totai lion on salaries
than they think." .
~nion of sbe exact !erms being of $56.2 million from their 1994
Dave Montgomery, the co-genColorado Rockies owner Jerry amplemented by leavang an enve- payrolls, and rolls back many of eral parmer of the Philadelphia
Mc~orris ~ut u~ a brave front, lope for him _at the hotel where the ·the union's gains in collective IBr- Phillies, said that figure is $8 miJ.
~~yang thattnstalling .a salary cap ~were bemg ~eld. He got II fol- gaining durillg the past23 years.
lion more than any team paid in
_1s JUSt another step m what con- lowmg the closang news conferThe next effort to restart the salaries in 1994 - meaning no
unues to he the collective bargaan- ences.
baseball talks could fall to former teams would pay a tax in 1995. A
ing process."
,
"When .1 got to my .r~m. ~e President Jimmy Carter, wbo separate, 10 percent tax would genHow~~er, Febr s P!~s are not message hg.~t was on, be sa1d expressed his willingness to get crate just $600,000, he said.
for add111onal negouauons, but early today. They told me I bad a involved if needed. Febr also raised
And while tbe owners face a
instead to ftle an unfair labor prac- package at the front desk."
the possibility of a long court ftght, certain legal battle from the playlice charge with the National Labor
Fehr called the Imposition ''pre- saying, ''It may not even he half. ers, they may also bave trouble on
Relations Board. The move could ordained." Players struck Aug. 12 time yet."
Capitol Hill.
come as -ly as today - the 19th ratber than accept a salary cap,
•'They measure every proposal
As the talks wound down to
annaversary of free agen~y - ?r w1pmg out the final 52 days and up against a salary cap and unless it their contentious end, influential
perhaps Tues~y . The unaon Will 669 games of tbe season. On Sept. measures as high as a salary cap, lawmalcers said they' re interested

·1n lhe NBA.,

,.
HoHo
Thia yur buy a !Pft that Ia
cullom made for MYOii• on
your IIIL Wllh home de~,
a eubec111tlon Ia Ideal for
lhoH wlh a buill-In cv·· 'lily.
Give a gift 1hal ~ , .
than once a Y-o ·r.

~ Dally ~hel Plfll 5'

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

~_!!~an °.r!.pp~t~~!en}-T~!!o !~pr!!_ry o~~!!,ed tb~Jif!ery !!I~! !?r.e!lco~d~~!!:'epc~

•,

. 68

"4

-~rld,Y, DeCember 23, 1894

Wt-llington 62, Marion Cath. 61 (OT)
Wortlllnaton KllbCiurne 68, Wester·
ville S. 61

Allulo • Doorol~ 8 p.m.
IDdi•ll. Cl!icqo, • p.m.
Howtou atSau ADtoD.Io. 8:30p.m.
Deliva- at Phoeoil, 9 p.m.
Dlllllll Porl.land, lO p.m.
WuhiDJ{Ob at LA . Clippen . 10:30
p.m.
SICIIIllenlo at L.A Lakera, 10:30 p.m.

.a

~}

lose ..~continued rroui Page 4)

New Jcney at CLEVELAND. 7:30
p.m.
MUwoultoe 111 Orlando. 7:30p.m
a-tone 111 Miami , 7::JOp.m.

,,

.

f

Our lobbies will close at noon
Christmas Eve, and reopen on
'fuesday, December 27.

Bexley 50, OlcnlaDiY 2!1
Bluffion H. Speocerville 3S
Bradford 46, Tri-Village 43
·
BrcckSYille 6S, Parma Ncmiimdy 28

Bristol 35, SouthinifCID 2S
Brookfield S5, Hubbard 42
Brun~wick 75, BedlordChanel54
Cadiz 76, Shadyside Sl
C1.11lon GleDOak 46, Alliaace JO
Canton Mckinley 56, Akron Cent.Howcr43
' •
Carliale 57, Day. Jcrrcnon 40
Che11peate 66 , Ports moutll Noue
Dame 20

'

~

't·

SUbiD lpllun anlncl llr.

QlftiO:

~E-----------------------

~-----------------------

ADDRESS-,----------------

ADDRESS-----------

CITY-------STATE..-- ZIP

CITY---~--STATE

~E

--ZIP-_,.._
~-----------------------

12 Months $88.58_

POMEROY,

46788

We fwpe to see you there!
326 -!ast Main Street

The Daily Sentin~l
ST~

Christmas 'lJay !Jfof§ Communion 11:00 a.m. 'lJec. 25

grace P,piscopa{ C/iurcfi

START DELIVERY DATE------

111 COURT

!(estiva['Eucfuuist if the ?fptiVitg 6:00 p~m. 'lJec. 24

•·

,

Pomeroy, O!Jl 45769 992-3968
fJ1ie !R.f:v. tffavitf&gt;I. VuPfantier, ~tor

I
I -.· t

"

J!CQV.ISI'llOg{S ,
'

!fI9{t£ J'EWE£!1(9'
. TWO LOCATIONS:
151 SECOND AVE., GAWPOUS
and 91 MILL ST., MIDDLEPORT

'

Open Frfdayh.m.·11 pm.
s.t. 8:30-4:30

FREE PARKING
FREE GIFT WRAPPING

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

....'.
;

;•~

':·;~ r

·' ..:

FuJI Golpel I~
4
33045 Hiland R01i
PU1Cr: Roy H-.
Sunday Scbool· 10 a.m.
Evt!lliq7:30p.m.
Tuerday .t. Thursday . 7:30p.m.
New Life Clnnb of God
S.R. 2A8 &amp;. Riebel Rood, Che.&lt;tor
PUICr: R.ov. Willilm D. llindt
Slllday Scbool· 9:30a.m.

Church of Ch11st

Apo s tol iC

0{ Cllll"* ofCbrttt
21z w. MaiD St
Putor: """'"' Milca
~ Scbool · 9:30 LID.
Wonbip- JD-.30 1.111,. 7 p.m:
WodaoMiay SeMcu • 7 p.m.

p

p

Woclneadoy

OJ WllllldeCIIII"* GICIIrlol
33226 Odldloa'•llano Rd.
_ , Scbool - 11a.m.
w.,.... 10o.m., 6p.m.
WedaoodOy SeMoa • 7 p.m.

Putor:Loo~

p.m.
IOLIIL
w~=ySdloal·
Somoo-7:30p.m.

,.

RollladFiroi ..... OIInll
Sunday Sdloal· P:30 .....
Woillip • 10:45 L11L
p
Putor: .... SdMan

"-'RaierWIUCIII

Wonhlp • 10:30 L11L
Flrol Swill41872=
Putor: B. ..._ 'lkylal
Sunday Sdoaal- 9:3!) .....
Worship· 10:45 a.aa., 7:Cl0p.m.
Wednelday Service~· 7:Cl0p.m.
FlniBIPIIIIOIInll

To..,...l'llllli Cllurda .. Cbrlrrl

!';e'

-=
Sludey Mincb
Suadaytiool- 9 a.m.
Wonbip · 9:45a.m.
Worlnl!tday -7 p.m.

Jne.,oon:~o

6chudPaJmerSL,w14 I Mt

Suaday Sdloai·9:1S .....
Wo~IO:U L1L, 7:Cl0p.m.
.Y.-5:30 ......
I.Drd't ~ •• ,.,., .. _,. ......
'11'
,., s.ma.. 7:Cl0 p.m.

......

Wedaolclly, BibleSrucly • 7 p.m.

. .......,de..... t~CIIrlrrl

~

Potoar. Bill Liale
Sllllday Sdloal· IOo.m.
~-ll&amp;.iL,7:30~
w
y s...ioeo-7· p.m.

Youlh ~Micloool T..pntoa
s-lay tiool· 9:30a.m.
Wrnbip· 1:00a.m.,I()-.30Lrn., 7:00p.m.
Wedaooday SeMoot - 7:00p.m.

Ml.U.... ~
Pua:JoeN.
Stmday Sdloal-9 a.m.

llldarJ Jlllll Cllurdl ofCbrlrrl

284101 SL RL 7,
.
SuadaySdloal·IOUL

•

lllloldt JlllpiiiiO...
SLRL 143jJAdrltL 7
Putor: Rev. J - R. Al:roe, Sr.
~ Sdloal· 10 LID.

w=IIL11L,6~
s.,.,;.,... p.m.

~llafllll=:lll
•2DII SL
Putor: ~- B. Kocloo
Wonhip • IOo.m., 7 ~
Wol i diySeMcu- p.m.

=...... :-.e

"R:t!:flllt
Clllon:ll
.
SI.,M.MD

w

• · IOa.m.
·JIUL,6t:.
s.M-·p.m.

r-:Aiiu

Luptlll• Clorlrrllu Clll""*
Suaday Sc:bool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m, 7:30p.m.
WerlatadaySemce7:30p.m.
H - GrenO.rdl
Puror:O...O:zSunday rrcbool· 1D-30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
R-.Dio Cbordr of·Cbrlrrl
Putor: Pbilip Storm
Saadoy tiool: 9:30a.m.
WonbipSeMce: 10:30 Lm.
JliiJie Seor!Y. Wodnetday, 6:30p.m.

C t111s tran Unron
Jlartl'oN Cllordlfl Cluillla
Clorlrrllu Uolon
Hanford, W.YL
Pua: Rev. Dovid M&lt;Mania
Suaday School · 11a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 LID., 7:30p.m.
WO!bMay Savioct · 7:30p.m.

a-

Suadoy Sclloal· 10 LID.

Wonhlp • 11 L11L

-

•
••
~
~

•

.•

.
••
•

.•
•

•

. Hyoell Rua Hollaea Cllurcb
Puur. Robert Manley
Sunday Scbool- 9:30 I.Jn.

Wo11hip • 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service . 7:30p.m.
Laurel CUff Free Melbodlrrl Church
Puror: Pcler Tremblay
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. J()-30 a.m. and 7p.m.
Woduaday Service · 7:00p.m.
Rullaad C..muoltf Cburcb
Putor: Rev. Roy M~ny
S101day Scbool· 9:30 a.m.
~J!vminl · 7 p.m.
w
Servi.... 7 p.m.

Wanlip-10:4.5o.m.
'l1lllndoy Sonlcu -7:30p.m.
b-FnoWIIIIojllllt
St-.SL
l'lolar: lt&amp;Y. l'lal Toylor
Suadoy Sdooal· lOam.

Wot B~
'y
.· 7p.m.

AAU ..s s-.a su.

.._,Rev. llovid Ruuel1 .
.SaariiY Sdlooi..S W~ ID.a.m.
B...... Semceo- 7 p.m.
w
SwriOII • 7 p.m.
I

,.,

ClllordlfiGedfl..........,
OJ. Wllill R4. elf Sl. RL 160
Pua: PJ. a.-on
' Soarlay Scbool • \0 L11L
Wonblp • II a.m.
7 p.m··

w........,. s.m... :

RACINE PLANING Mill ·

~

K&amp;C JEWELE~s· .

Mill Work

212 [ 1f1lnSheet

Friday • fellowlhip tervice 7 p.m.

Wonll,lt&gt; • to LID.

Tbe a.Jieyen' F - l p Mlalll17
Modlanic a..l'llmeroy
PU1Cr: Rev. Marpret J. Robini&lt;XI
SeMoot: Wednclday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday, 2:30p.m.

Somdey Scbool· 9:15a.m.

.......

Putor: Arbor Ooblnlo
Suaday Scbool· 9:30 LIDo
WorUip • 10:30 a.m.
Tlunday
-7 p.m.

w-c.ter .
Pua:RaaPilloe
Suaday Sdlool- 9:15 .....
Wanllip • lO:IS a.m.
.

W~ySeMce - 7:30p.m.

Sll•....tleWorrltJIFallll
Pulor: llovid Doiley ;
Sunday Sdooal9:30 ......

Rdoldlla ur. oon:~o
Pa110r. uwnnr:e PonoriiD ·
~1.Scbool· 10 a.m. .
w
y Services • 7 p.m.
SOO~. WA¥0.,~

IIIII:&lt;

S!mday wonhip-

10 a.m.
W-.fay ..mce • 6:30p.m.

'

Wn 'ay Stimoe! • 10 a.m.

I

c.noil
Puror: x....Ja Baker

'·

Wonhip • 111:45 a.m. (2Drl.t. 4111 Srm)

Clourdlfl J - Cllrlrrl,
Ap!lllollc Fallll

Trl-'lf CoeJniall•al Chorcb
Puror: R'... Roland Wildman
C.urdl· 9:15a.m.
Wcnhip • 10:30 a.m.

1/4 mile put Pun Meitt oe New Ua. Rd. .
PU1Cr: Willilm Ym Moloi .
.,
7:00p.m.
•
w
-7:00p.m.
t·
Friday· :00 p.m.
I

Tile Salnb Amlf
lU a-,,.A-,I'Ilmeroy.
Suodoy Sc:bool· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip -10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m.

I

=

.....

................,
Pentecostal

Putor: r - h Baker
l!utLIIIrt

......., Km Maller

W'onhip-hm.

'lbiniA¥0.

PaiiDr. R.ov. Carlt Baker
Sunday Scbooi·IOLIIL_
BvenJnc • 6 p.m•
Wodoarda Servi&lt;:ca 7:00

1411 Bridaeman SL, Syncute
Puror. Roy (Mike) n..ml"""
Sunday Sdlool • 10 a.m.
Bvt!lliq-6p.m.
Wedneaday Sen&gt;ice - 7 p.m.

......

CeahlleCIIIII'dr
MilD A Piflh SL

Hwl c.......,~q Cburcb
.
OlfRL 12A
Putor: Bdael Hart
Sunday Scboal- 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

W~-9a.m.

D7_.. c....IDIIIJ oarc11

s-lay Scbool· 10 a.m.

Tueodoy s.m- -7 p.m.
JlellooiCiilo"*
Towllallill u. 468C
Suaday SCbool-9a.m.
Wonllip -to .....
w~
10 a.m.
IJ•d....... CIIon:ll

sem....

GnrldS&amp;.Saaday Sdloal· 10 a.m.
W&lt;lllllip-llLJD.
WodnetdlyScnba ·I p.m.

.

1.
··

.

!·

,tort.. .

Mldrlleport ....
Sunday Scbool- 9 Lm.
Wonhlp • 10 a.m.

I Seventh-Day AdventiSt
!

Cllapel Cllurcll
Lany Paw, SuperiDrenclen1
. Sraiday tdlod -10 a.m.
Wonllip • 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Savice · 7 p.m .

TardiCIII....
Co. Rd. Ill
s-lav !lcbool· 9:30a.m.

,.....;:
\',

F.... ~lll'dl

Sanda=.

9:30a.m.
Wonllip -10:4~ a.m., 7:30p.m.
W"edncoclay7:30p.m.
Mt. Olhoc--aiiJ Chu,..
Puror.u-BIIIb
Sunday Sehool· 9:30 Lm.
B....ma-7p.m.
WIMiaorlay SeMce • 7 p.m.

Wonbip • 9;30 LID.
Sunday Sdiaol· 10:30 a.m.
a.m.,6p.m.
SeMcu • 7 p.m.

&lt;·

Mlrldlepari~fi ... N--•

...-.
a......,. A. Omdilf
Suaday Sdooal· 9:30 ......

u- FaJOo Cloonlo

RL 7oa Pomeroy By·Pua
PU1Cr: Rev. Robert B.. Smilll, Sr.
Suaday Scbool- 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip-IG-.30a.m.,7p.m.
Wedneaday Semce • 7 p.m.

Wanbip-ID-.30LDL, 6:30p.m.
Wedootday SeMceo • 7 p.m.

RAWliNGS-COATS

You Don'! Have To Look Far
To
the Best Buys In

Crow'$ family Restaurant

· Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE .-----..

Veterans
Me-:norial Hospital

' SERV.ICES
Mai~

115 I. Mtmoriol Dr.

992·5130 Pomer.or

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT .
204 Cqndor St.

Nationwide Ins. co.

Porntroy OH.

of Columbus. 0 .

1

992-2975
•

, ID4 w. Main 1
997·1lll Pomorov

Pomeroy

992-2.104 .

·'

EWING FUNERAL HOME

.; ..~ .. Divnit1·
~
. and Sf'rt'in• Alac·av.t'•
.
' .;··
Established 1913

'. .

9~2-2121

106 Mulletry Ave.

•

Oh, The Sounds Of Christmas!

Eda u............... Cbrltl
l 1/2 mi1oa ~ ¥ hodtvillo
mSUiellaiei2A
Putor: Rev. Robert Madr1ey
.Sunday Scbool· 10 Lm.
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
Werlao..tay S'avlou 7:30 j&gt;m

r----, IT'S

FJOIUE!

RAI~G .

BARGAINS.:.
in the

. 264 South 2nd

21H.

•••••• •••

t

Harrloaa... ~CIIon:ll
Wortldp • 9 un.
Sunday SchOol· 9:4S LID.

-

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

_ . ~~~ HIS good graces shine
:
down upon you ancfyoor. loved ones this Chrfstma:;.

Merry Christmas
From
Margie J. Lawson

Pre'\Crlphons

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~LES &amp; SERVICE

Pnm.eroy

D.D.S. and Staff
· 5th &amp; Pearl St. Racine

.I

I • /

992-7075
112 Norlh Second An.
.Ohio

Mdy the blessed voices of song and laughter echo through
your hearts as we enter into this noteworthy season. This is a
glorious time of yeor when feelings of brotherh9Qd prevail
and the spirit of peace on earth and harmony ·
throughout the land prevails.
With a song in our hearts, we'd like to voice our expressions
of-~ wlll-enel-gretlruee-ta-oor-maAy~fioo-Gustomers-ancL ~ _

.''

~~~~! l~l ·

991 19SS

May your spirits be lifted by tbe beauty of
the season, juSt as oun have been by the
privilege of /mowing good people 11/te you.

'

SynCIIIO Flrol Ualltlll Preobfloriaa

Putor. Rev. Kri.... Robintm
Suaday Scboal· IOa.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Our best wtsbn ""' wltb you and yours as
ow celebrate the Mlrack of His birth.

Happy Ho/U:Uiys and marry tbanlts.

Presbyterran

Sunday Scboal· 900 a.m.
Wonbip-10:30a.m., 7p.m.

Clorlollao Fel-lp Ca~kr
Salem SL, Rulland
Putor. Robert B. Mutoer
Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Wonbip : 11:15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Sen&gt;ice - 7 p.m.

• 7·p.m.

Mldrllepert PoD'..,.ol

s,,.... MJ.....,

Worloearloy •7 p.m.

GOD BLESS ALL
UV~ CREATURES
. at
CHRISTMASTIME

Race St.
Middleport
· Stylist: Jana Baker, Stylist I Owner Merri Amsbary

BveninJ.;~

Wodnetday

Nancy Parker Campbell
aad Staff
Meigs County Auditors
Office

the
blessings
of
Christmas
be with you
.today and always.

A.B. CUTTING CELLAR

SL RL 12A, RaGolp
PUIOr. William Habact
Sunday Scbool - lOLjn.

FaiOo T....,._ Cburdl
Bailey Run Rood
Putcr. Rev. Bmm«t Raw1011
S...Jay School- 10:00 a.m.
B•..U.a7p.m.
Thunday SeMce • 7 p.m. ·

Wishing you the best of
both worlds at Christmas.

Our very best wishes are ready to be delivered
to each and every one of you.
Thank you for shopping with us.

'

Puror. Sam Anrlonon
Sunday SehooiiO a.m.
Bv..U.a -7:30p.m.
Wednaday Service· 7:30p.m.

May

ALLWUPPED
TO GO!

~

cam:Z.,.'!""*
575FeuJSL,
'

Middleport

Mrn'-8Star
Putcr. 1.-b Baker
Suaday Scbool• 9:45 .....
Wonllip · IG-.30 a.m.
Thurlolay scm... -7:30p.m.

PEACE
AND
JOY

flace

Bventnc • 7 p.m.

Eodtlme H - til Prayer

Puror:~Randolpll

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Stmday Sehool9;30,a.m,
Wonhip ·II a.m., 7:30p.m.

&lt;• Burlilr&amp;lum
dlun:b elf Roue 33)
Puror: Robert v

Momina
a.m.
B...UOJ W
: 11
7 p.m.
Wednetday SeMce -7 p.m.

·---

Harriaoevillo llood

Paller. Rev. Yic!or Rllulh

PU1Cr: Theron Durham
Stmday • 9:30 a.m. lnd 7 p.m.
Wodnotday • 7 p.m.

CoaMIIo Ualted Mllllodllll Porlab
Putor: Holm Kliao

Pulrr. Rev. Qwla Maa1t
Wonhip · 9:30 L11L
Sunday Sdiool- ID-.30 a.m.
u~ Sunday 6:30p.m.

CaiY11rJRipl• Ciapa1

u....-.uJo Communllf Cburcb

s.m-

Old Datar IIIMe ~a.­
. Sunday Sehool: 10 a.m.

Loe........

Fallb Fot-.p ~fwCIIIrlrrl
PUI&lt;r. Rev. l'luldin Didceoa
Scrvico: Friday, 7 p.m• .

m

y aolb Pellowllllp, Suaday • 6 p.m.

1-= Km Moiler
Saaday Scbool· 10 L1L
Wonhip • II LID. md7p.a.

Putor: Rev. Cwlet Mull
Sunday Scboal· 9:30 LID.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m.
WodaeadaySemoot-7:30p.m.

Pa-= llev. BJadtwoorl
Sunday School • 9:30 Lm.
Wcnhip ID-.30a.m.,l:30p.m;
Wodneoday SeMce .-7:30 p.m.

W~·7p.m.

lld--

l'ulor.KiAi:d.r

s-lay Scboal· 10 a.m.

Putor. Shanlllllautmao
Wonhip-9Lm.
Suaday Scboal • 10 a.m.
Thwaday SeMoot - 7 p.m.

CaiYir)' Bible Cb•"*
l'cmerov Pike, Co. Rd.

Sunday Scbool- 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.

Umted Methodrst

~

s,..-Finloon:~ot~GocJ

Wanllip • 10:30 a.m.
Biblo Slady1\aoaday • 10 LIDo

Suaday Scbool· 9:30 .....
Wonhip • 10:45 L11L (Ill .t. 3nl Sua)

ML Ollvt Urolled MlllloriJI
Oil 12A behind WilbMIIo
Putor: Rev. Raldl SM:t
·Sunday Sehool •~:JII LID.
Wonhip • lD-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thurtday SeMoot • 7 p.m.

Letart, W.YL ltL I
PallOr. Ranldn Roac:b
Sllllday SdlooJ. 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30LID.,7:00p.m.
Wodneoday SeMce ·7:00p.m.

Flllll Fol Golpel Cburcb
l..oqlloaom
Putcr. Steve Rood

St. Pial L l l - Cllon:ll
ComorSycamon &amp;. Second SL, PaDeroy
Pua: Do.... $pokina
Suaday tioo!- 9:.c5
Wonhip · II a.m.

w=

Fat ...... Blblo Clll!'d ·

Otller Clti.Jrclles

SoJoday Scboal· 9:30 .....

G..... Urolled Modoodllll
Wonhip ·9:30a.m. (Ill&amp;. 2nd Suo),
7:~ p.m. (3rd • 4lb Suo)
Worlaelday SeMce -7:30p.m.

w....,..

Y/oidlip. 10 LIDo

,._,
R'::.!tn........
Suaday Scbool· 9:15a.m.

As you can see in tbese verses,
God gives us, as Cli(istians, quile a
few commands. Some of these
seem to be out of reach for most of
tbe Christians of today. We are in
situations and places many times
tbat seem to be out of control and
this causes our behavior to do otberwise.
In going back into my past and
reflecting a linle bit of my history,
I can see what God is lrying to say
now, lbat I could not see, or even
bad tbe ability to see. about these
verses. When God says, "warn
tbem lbat are unruly," a new Christian does not have lbat ability. No
one wiU listen or Jake heed to tbeir
voice.
The Bible says, "comfort tbe
feebleminded." this is for tbose
who are broken hearted. It is bard
in Ibis day aDd lime to get people to
see broken beai1ed people when we
live in a nation that is crying itself
to sleep. To support tbe weak is
very difficull, when everyone
seems to be weak and draw most of
lbeit sttengtb from a substance of
one kind or anolher.
As for myself, I was living in
tbe world and was drinking from
day to day, going from one
to
aootber and disobeying at of tbe
laws of mao and God. I was not
concerned about any of my family
or my friends, only myself. I was
defmildy used by SalaD to perform
evil deeds and when I accepletl
Christ as my personal saviour, He

Whlle'aCIIapel
Coolville Rood
Putor: R.ov. Pbil1ip ~
Sunday Sehool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip. 10:30 a.m.
Wednerday Service -7 p.m.

Now DIY• Clio,.. flllle NazarPulrr. Gloarlco su-s
Suodoy Scbool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm., 7 p.m.
,w.....,...y s.m... - 7 p.m.

..... CIIIapol
......, 1'loocrrloO Smldl
Sunday Scbool • 9 a.m.

W'onl!iP. 9....

.m.

Bald Knob, oa Co. Rd. 31 ·
Putor: Rev. RatcrWiDfonl
SundaJ Sdlool • 9;30 Lm.
Worlhip-10:4.5 a.m., 7 p.m. ·
Wednerday SerYloo • 7 p.m. ..•

PurtlaadFiroiCbon:ll tithe Nuarene
Putcr.JCJIIn w. DousJaa .
Suorlay Scbooi·IO:OO am.
Wonllip • 6:30p.m.
Woclnaday'semcci -7 p.m.

......,=:r.llaker

OUr Sa..._ r ,._.. QII'CII
Wain.. md lloruySIL, Rav.n!ood, W.YL
In~: ClooneC. Weindt
Scbool· TU:OO a.m.
onhip • II a.m.

Freodrn Golpel MI....

Rollurl Cllon:llt/1 ... Nazarm•
Pulrr. s-1 Buye
Sunday Scbool • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m .• 6:30p.m.
Wocloetday SeMcu · 7 p.m.

s.w-

s-lay Sdloal· 10 LID.

Putor. Shanlllllautmao
Suaday tioo1 • 9:30 lUll.
Wonhip • II LID., 6;30 p.m.

llullladCburcllfiGod
Putor: ~ L. Sean
Suaday
• JQ LID.
Wonbip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
WerlaeUiy SeMca • 7 p.m.

FO....a.

"

SWiday Scbool • 9:30 Lm. •
lfvenina • 7 p.m.
Wodnaday Sen&gt;ice. 7 p.m.

Suodoy Sc:bool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
wocloetday Servi&lt;:ca • 7 p.m.

l'lllor: 0..... NIWIDIIi
Slmday Scboal • 10 lUll.
Wonbip-hm.
Thllnday SeMcet • 6;30 p.m.

I Thessalonians 5:14 -18 "Now made drastic changes ill my iife.
One tiling God bas given me, is
we exba:t you, brethren, warn lbem
tbat are unruly, comfort tbe feeble a cenain amount of palience
minded, support lbe weak. be toward tbe ungodly. I now under·
slaod tbeir destination and I !mow
patient toward all men.
See tbat none render evil for tbat lbeir future home will be beD.
evil UDto any man; but ever foUow All God tells us to do is warn lbem.
tbat which is good, botb among It is up to tbem to lislen and make
tbe final decision as to where lbey
yourselves, aDd to all men.
wiU spend etemity.
Rejoice evermore.
One of tbe most difficult verses
Pray witbout ceasing.
·
In every !bing give thanks, fcx' in tbe Bible, aod I believe all lhe
tbis is tbe will of God in Christ
Jesus concerning you."

Cartetonln=~O...ct.
Pu10r: Jrlr Smilh

CIMrrler Cloon:ll flllle Naartne
Putcr. Rev.llolbon Orale

Saaday Scbool- 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 un.

AINrl

s.:.,~':f.':},/......

FlalWIIorll
Putor: Koilh Rader
Sunday Sehool • I0 a.m.
Wonlip ·II a.m.

Putcr.~Smilb

N-Ciulllr

W~0:45o.m.

'aC!'t'!"-

&amp;-...

MII&amp;ICooptnll•e Puttb

Mt. Morilll·......
~AMilaa.,t.N... tl
Fulor. RaY. CliliJed enq; Jr• .
Suadoy Sdooal- !!:30 ....

Ca~inet Mak in~

7S Parl SL, Middleport.
Putor: Rev.JQhn NOville
~ ac:hool • 9:30Lm.
Wcnbip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
W - y Service · 7:30p.m.

PuiGr: Woody Call

B~
'l1wnday
-7:30

W

WeelefU Blblellollaea Church

N.......,,

Putor: Kcida Rader
Slmday Scboal · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 9 Lm.

Ml..mle
Putcr. 0..... N..._
SlradaJ Scbool • 9 lUll.
Wanllip • 10 a.m.

Soolb lklllal NowT....;. .
Sibor RirJ1e
Puror. Daane Sy4onll!lrtir ·
Sunday Sdlool- 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednelday s.,.,;.., . 7 p.m.

Srnc-Cbon:ll rllloe
Puror: Rev. Ridt Swraill
Stllday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W.....oday SeMcu -7 p.m.
I' rroyCIIII"*GIIIMN.-Pulrr. Rev.,.,.. MAOunc
Suodoy Sc:bool • 9:30 a.m.
Wanbip · ·10:30 a.m. ODd 6 p.m.
Werlalotday SeMcu -7 p.m.

Stmday Sdlool • 9:4$ a.m.
Wonlip • 11 a.m.
WodnetdaySeMcoa - 7:30p.m.

1/2 mile elf RL 32!1
Puror: R... O'Dell Manley
Stmday Scbool· 9:30 Lm.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
WcdaeOday Service · 7:30p.m.

lle&gt;tcr

Sunday Bwnina • 6:30p.m.
'lhuaday Service . 6:3crp.m:

=;cs.:=.

Pine Grove Bible Holloea Church

LIIMrtf Clorlrrllu Clwrcb

.._:RaY. But Sbulor
Suaday Sdloal • IG-.30 a.m.
WOnhlp • 9-.30 a.m.
Tlaunday s.m--7:00 p.m.

C-.t Cloorrlar

Balli (Midol.-t)
Putcr. Y~~~~~tpye
Sunday tioof. 9;30 a.m.
Wonhip • 1()-.30a.m.

Putor: Jooeph B. Hoaldnt
Stmday Sr:hool- 9 a.m.
Wonllip • 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
w......a.y s.m- . 1 p.m.

Raciae,

Old ....eiFnoWII~on:ll

Learlinl CJoek Rd., Rulland
Puror: R.ov. Dewey Kina
S1Dday school· 9:30a.m.
S101day wonhip ·7 p.m.
WedDetday pnyermoelina- 7 p.m.

B_ _..,. DontSiump

......r

~)

n.....m, Semoo -7 p.m.

Carner Gl SL RL 12A &amp;. Bndbuly Rd.

B~~
Wedo!otdoy
• 6::10p.m.

(

Y001b~-5:30p.m.

llut'l:.J

v-.

~

GtCiorlal

Pulrr. Tcm Rao)'llll
SUnday Scbool· 9:30 .....
Wonbip ·1D-.30i.m.

...... Cbon:llfiCIIrlrrl
Puror:
Underwood
SUnday
• 9:30 a.m.
Wonllip • ID-.30 a.m., 7 p.m.

lllciMFirolllpllll
Youlh Putor: AlnD
Sunday Sdloal- 9-.30 .....
Wonlllp·I0:40UL,7:Cl0p.m.
Wednelday Sorvba -7:00p.m.

..

·

SUnday Scbool· 9:30 a.m.
Wonbip • 10:30 a.m., 7:00p.m.
WodoOiday Services- 7 p.m.

Bu&amp;MilDII.
Sunday Sdloal· 9'30 LID.

•..

a- fiSJraroo Roll- CII-

Zlaa Cllon:ll .. CbrloJ
Paa.oy,llanilorrvillc Rd. (lb.1&lt;43)

.,r-s ......

Coftee hour followJna

Sunday ac:hool • 9:30 Lm.
Sundal wonhip • 10:35 Lm. &amp;: 7 p.m.
OUidrau chun:h • I 0:35a.m. Youlh 6 p.m.
Werlnetday pnyeuenice • 7 p.m.

........... Jildtt~tiCbrttt
......., Joc:k Colo&amp;row
SUnday Scbool-900 a.m.
Wonhlp • lQ-.30 LID., 6:30p.m.
w .........y s.m... -6:30p.m.

Satwday Somoo •

326 B.. Main Si., Pomeroy
Rec10r. Rev. D. A. dul'lmticr
Holy Buchariat and S111day Scbooi11Lm.

Holiness

tt.o en"* o1 Cbrlll
Wonllip , 9:30a.m.
Suaday Sdiod · ID-.30 Lm.
..._..Jehy WallaaJ
•• and 3rd Suaday

I

G..- ElllocoPII Cburdl

D111nllle Holnea Cburdl
31057 State Route 32!1, !Anaovlle
PUICr: Rov. Rick Maloyed

·

Will:.-= a....

..., • 7 p.m.

Episcopal

Mk!CI part Cb""* ofCIIIrlll
$dundMaln
Putor: Alllartaoe
YCIOIIII Mioittor. Bill Fnozior
Saadly Scbool· 9:30a.m.
WC!IIblp-1:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
WodDuday s.,.,;..,- 7 p.m.

Free
Alb Sbeel.'

a.m.
-7:30p.m.

Wonhi~p.m.

Neue-oiiiCbo...
Sunday Wonbip · 2:30p.ai.;
Thunday ICMCCI· 7:30p.m.

ReoriiYIIo Fellowllllp
Cb""* rllht Naza""e
Putcr.Jcm w. DousJaa
Stllday Scbool· 9:30a.m.
Wonbip ·!0:45a.m., 7 p.m.
Wodoelday SeMcu • 7 p.m.

'

~.

• I

f?

949-2575

friends. Your kind support Is always welcome
and greatly appreciated.

EWING .FUNERAL HOME
i

Mulberry Ave.
Po~eroy, OH
992·2121

I .

'.

�..Friday, .~mber 23, 1984

'

The Dally Sentm¢1

By The Bend

·

Friday, O.cember ~31 , 1894

'

P•ll• 8

....

'·

: · NBC's Homicide has been
·" struggling to lind Its niche·since
,Its debut abOut two years ago.
'~ this ~ason, the network
put the shlllillln the 10 p.m.
• Eastern F~day time slot
opposite ABC's 2().20.

Rutland Garden Club has party ,

NEW ROTARY OFFICERS- Olllcen of
the Mlckllcport-Pomeroy Rolllry Club for 1!195
are, from left: Hal Kneen, treasurer; John A.

Anderson, secretary; Jon Perrin, president, and
Uoyd Blackwood, vice-president

'

Middleport giveaway
winners announced

Chester D of A
has Yule oartv

Members of lhe Chester Council, Daughters of the American
Revolution, enjoyed a bollday dinThe Middleport Community Fatness, Dorothy Harden; Acquisiner party at the ball Tuesday Di&amp;hl Association bas announced winners tions, Alice Woods; Fanners Bank,
Mary Jo Barringer, councllor, in its fourth week of giveaway Peggy Lewis; Western Auto, Shanwelcomed tbe IJI'OIIP· Rellons or lhe drawings.
non Hubbard; Middleport Trophies,
officerl were given following the
Tbe store and corresponding Bruce Bumgardner; General Tire,
ritualistic opening wbicb included winner include Dairy Queen, Earie Karen Hall; King Hardware, Ann
scripture and the LOid's Prayer in Wood; Millie's Restaurant, Betty Lambert; Classic Cuts, Sherman
unison.
Sayre; Ingels Carpet, Lee Bumgar- Buskirk; Johnson's Video, Jean
Ella Osborne and RUth Stephen ner; Fruth Pharmacy, Carol Comp- Trussell;
·
· were reported ill. It was noted that son; Dan's, Pat Young; Valley
Gingerbread House, Frank Marnew officers will be installed at lhe Lumber, Pam Priddy: Mill Street tin; Middleport Flowers, Ray
next metinB. Books will be audited Books, ,Linda Spencer; Trolley Sta- Smith; Ohio River Bear Co., Scou
at 1 p.m. on Jan. 2 at lhe home of tion Crafts, Ruthann Plants;
Chapman: Country Naturals, Jim
Helen Wolf.
Vaughan's Cardinal, Betty Fra- Peyton; Furniture "T', Harry BaiAttending were Eva Robson, zier; Locker 219, Harry Mullins; leyi. Cornet Restaurant, Wilma
. Doris Koenig, Opal Hollon, Betty Bahr Clothier, Dick Starkey; Mill Mcuraw; Quality Print, Kay FredDenny, Virginia Lee, Margaret End Fabrics, Catherine Burton; erick; Dottie Turner Realty, Sharon
Amberger, lillian Demosky, Char- Ingels Furniture., Grace Johnson; Dennison; Foreman &amp; Abboll,
lotte Grant, Esther Smith, Pauline Johnson's Variety, Holly Boso; Mary Jeffers; McClure's, Betty
Ridenour, Helen Wolf, Erma Cle- Middleport Department Store, Roush; Peoples Bank, Barbara
land, I~y Newell, Thelma Wbi~. Rusty Lavender; AB Cutting Cel· Payne; and Ellis BP, Becky
Iva Powell. Lora Damewood, Faye Jar, Cba*s Calaway; Big Bend English.
Kirkhart, Doris Grueser, Penny

Cbrismtas legends, holiday plant
care and things for decorating for
the holidays were included in the
program presented at the annual
Yuletide potluck and party beld at
the home of Margaret Weber.
The Weber home was extensively decorated for the holidays . Mrs.
Weber used "A Time for Beauty"
and bad prayer for the devotional
period, and Clotine Blackwood
gave the blessing.
For roD call !be I0 members and
a guest, each wearing a handmade
corsage, named a Cbrisbnas plant
they bad purchased. Handmade
tray favors were collected and will
be delivered to the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center by
Eva Robson.
It was reported that wreaths
made by Mrs. Robson for tbe
Cbrismtas flower show have been
on display at the Meigs County
Library in Pomeroy. Several members placed plants at churches and a
couple decorated at the Harrisomille Cburcb.
Neva Nicholson reported on the
bus trip to Westerville to see the
Living Tree. Sbe also read a letter
from Roberta Wilson, past member
and president. now living in Kentucky.
Tbe Christmas program was
entitled "Wreaths wlth a Twist"
and included information on using
succulents and herbs as an alternative to evergreens. A wreath frame,
sphagnum moss, potting soil, copper wire and a tool for making
holes are all that Is required it was
noted. Planted, put on a flat surface, and given sun, beat and water
the Jiving wreath will grow and can
be used year after year, members
said.
Mrs. Nicholson talked on living
holiday arrangements noting that
they are easy to make, inexpensive,

=-~~:.us~:~s~~-sr:
Eagles Class obse I"'BS
Baum, Zelda Weber, Etbel Orr,
V
~t!~
ringer,
Marcia~:.~
Keller, Dori~ . Ch I""7.stmas lA
VVIith party

Grueser, Sandra White, Goldie
Frederick.
Tbere was a gift exchange, Mrs.
Baum played Christmas songs, and
readings included "Sometime During Christmas" by Erma Cleland,
"0, Blessed" Night" by Mrs. Hoilon, "Snownake" by Jean Welsh,
"Noel, Noel" by Mrs. Grueser,
''The Christmas Light" by Thelma
White, "Lowly Donkey" by Esther
Smith, "Mary Knew" by Joann
Baum.

j

The Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Cborcb, Syracuse, held its annual Christmas
pany at the church social room.
The Rev. Deroo Newman gave
the blessing. The tables and tree
were all decorated for the holidays.
Games were played and there was a
c~l sing. Attending were the Rev.
Mr. Newman and his wife,
Michelle, Carroll and Addie Norris,
Linda Ferren, Jack Williams, Dick

and Betty Ash, Jean Stout, and
guests, Kenneth and Fred Wt'lson,
Virgil and Helen ·Teaford, Thelma
Hawley, Bob Smith, Russ and
Hope Monre. Irene Padc:er, Dennis
Moore, Elma Louks, Marie
Houdashelt, Beulah Ward, Emogene Hamilton, June Lee, Wanda
Rizer, and Mary Lisle.

'j

THURSDAY

MIDDLEPORT- Live nativity
scene at the Hope Baptist Church
on Gram Street in Middleport,
'lbursday and Friday, 7 to 9 p.m.
eacb evening.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Tuppers
Plains Veterans of Foreign Wars
·Post 9053 meeting Thursday, 7:30
p.m. at post home.

RUTLAND - Christmas program at the Rose of Sharon Holioess Cburclt, 7 p.m. Thursday. Pns-

tor Dewey King invites the public.
FRIDAY

LONG BOTIOM - Cbrisbnas
progr.un, 7 p.m. Friday at the Long
Bottom Methodist Church.

or longer to trigger th~ flowering
mecbanisin. Sbe suggested that in
areas where tempenture is not low
enough, a night-shading process
can be started in mid-Sepiember by
placing lhe plant in total darkness
for 12 hours cacb for 40 nl8iJts.
Dorothy Woodard gave the legend of lhe candy cane.·saying tliat.
its shape is that of a sbep~erd' s
staff,·symbolizing guilanee an&lt;!
protection, the color red for the
atoning saaifice and white symbolizing purity, its distinct odor, mucb
like the berb hyssop used for heal·
ing, and it is candy meant to ·be
broken and shared just as His body
was brdcen that we might share in
His inheritance.

wlrieb l11kelb ""'"' lbe
sia of lbe worlll. Joh ~~~,

•

llmJ

!ltnka !o You AU ·

iiYou'VII been ao V8l'J good to

we wllh you .ud yours

'Vrl beatl

ClELAND REALTY

May you be blessed with peace and understan¥ing
throughout this holy season.

0

Downing Childs Mullen Musser
-•

v;;~~~~

Insurance
111 Second Street •Pomeroy

992-1159
PO.IOY, OliO

0

992-3381

•

REEDSVILLE - Christmas
Eve service, Reedsville United
Methodist Cburcb, "Evergreen and
Candlelight", 6 p.m.
nJESDAY
RACINE - Racine Area Community Organization (RACO),
Tuesday, 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Star .
Mill Park. New officers to be elected.

.·

~~
~

-~v

0

0

0

0

As you take steps to enjoy thfs merry seasbn (jf tit
good cheer and good will, we'd like to express

0

•

0

•

!Jlapp!f t]{ew ~ar
![rom

. ·

~~

.

~~·

&lt;&gt;

t&gt;.

~

.~...

.

! SIJ'/leHOE• PL t\.:A 'CE
!

MIDDLEPORT

falf!:ltc'ls::!I!:IBOI!S::Ifa-BilW. .Boltc'. . . lalll:l'g:(tllKI•IIIIfj:i!llif!

• ••

from .

lark's Jtwtlrg Jtort

..
~
-~

We're .Singing His Praises
the seuoa, jut u oun bave
prmlege of bowiDg good.
-

Thank you for your friendship ud patroupl
AtL ~ le4t,

PQm~roy Nursing and R~h~bllltatlon c~nt~r

· - - - 36759 Roclclprlftgllload • PQmeloy, Ohio .16769-4731 • 61A,/992~
'

'

36394 Leading Creek Rd.
Middleport

36394 leading Creek Rd.
Middleport

742-2160

742-2700

MEIGS MOTEL

POMEROY
EXXON

poe 41111t S~•• ~

....

·~

'~

992-6979

MASON
EXXON

MASON
MOTEL

State Route 33
Mason

Route 33
Mason ·

.HOMES
State Route 33
Mason

•'
••
~

773-5001

lad111, Ohia. 45 771
Phlllll614)
949-2210

Syracuse, Ohio'45779

West Main Street

992-5531

773-5891

.•.
-~

.We ·Wish you and your entire famuy a
Christmas
b'essed ·with happiness.
•,.

HERALD SERVICE
COMPANY

Just oH State Route 7 and
State Route 33
Pomeroy

.

DECK THE HALLSI

·HERALD OIL AND
GAS CO.

I

---~---------- --~~-

77

CHESHIRE
FOODMART

-··-·--

Ste~te

Route 7 Cheshire

367-7838

Pflalll 16141
992-6333

.i

Thanks for your patronage the past year!

••
•
,.

' f

)

0

.ani

1

As we prepare for another festive
season. our thoughts tum to the
many individuals who have helped us grow
this past year.
Th,ank you for putting
your trust in us.

'

0

9vferrg Cfiristmas

our best holiday wishes to all. Thanks so very
much for your patronage. .

We couldn't asltfor ntcer neighbors or frlendlter folk than all of you.
Thank you for gtvtng us something extra to stng about. .
,
. ,,
Merry Christmas!

}

0

QUIET VISIT WITH SANTA- Jordan Wood Is allt:.e guy
or few words, but all he had to do to get on tbe good side rl Santa
was to look up and smile. He Is tbe son or Mr. and Mn. Keltb
Wood of the Chester area, and bis visit with Sllnlll took place at
the Hometown Christmas program on the PotnerC!Y Jlllrldna lot

1

Birthday observed

Christmastime Will Soon Be Here!

U

••

0

... (And Yours, Tool)

· UIIY SHiiCEI &amp;
. STAFF
.

•

0

0

i ' '

MEIGS COUNTY
CLERK OF COURTS

•

0

Haley Dawn Tripp, daughter of 1
Rodney and Stacy Tripp, Pomeroy, I
celebrated her first Dec. 14.
1
A Minnie Mouse theme was carried out and cake and ice cream I
were served.
I
Attending were her grandpar· I
ents, Alvin and Barbara Tripp,
Mike and Becky Newell, Larry, 11
I anet. and Ashley Life, Darla and :
EDINBURGH, Scotland (AP) Jake Zuspan, Jayne; Dakota and •
- Scottish journalist John Black Baylee Collins, Susan Pullins, Car- 1
(1783-1855) went to London in rie Morrissey, Debbie, Adam and 1
1810 and became a reporter on the Abbie Chevalier, and Todd, Kelly 11
and Ryan Tripp.
11
Momlog Chroni-cle
11
·
Sending
gifts
were
Fred
and
.
Seven years later, Black became
11
editorandbeldlhejobfor26years. Bertha Smith, Bo and Belly 1
He was a close ally and companion WRo•.thndgoenb.• Fred Tripp, and Kathryn
of Prime Minister Lord Melbourne. ·
•

...,. •

All aboard! Load up with cheer!
Christmastime is almost here.
To all our good patrons, we know it's a
fact,
'
That with your kind help we've stayed
right on track.
So without any further delay,
We'll say "thanks for your business• Have a great holiday! "

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SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Cbrismtas Day
Sunday school, Asbury United
Methodist Cburcb, 8:45 am.; worship service 10 am. at Forest Run
ChUICb.

0

Be~olll lbe L••h of 6o4,

Dickens' Boss

Community calendar
Tbe Community Calendar Is
published as a rne service to
non-profit groups wishing to
announce meeting and special
events. The calendar Is not
designed to promote sales or
rundralsers or any type. Items
11re printed as spece permits and
cannot be guaranteed to run a
specUk number of clays.

0
0

1 'icrfY7:A»ings
HALEY DAWN TRIPP

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r-:asa~-

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'=

and long lasting. She said that
flowering trOpical plants are good
for a Jiving arrangement and suggested white poinsettias combined
with ivy and variegated foliage
plants.
Adding a decorative bow or a
strand of miniature ligbts enhance
such arrangements which are best
placed in a lined basket or other
container with heavy duty plastic to
keep the moisture from furniture,
she said.
The timely hint by Ann Webster
was on bow to get a Christmas cactus to bloom. Sbe said it grows in a
cool sunny window and needs
night temperature no wanner than
55 degrees. for a period of 45 days

resslv For Vou...
Our Verv Best lUtlei

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�Page-1D-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleport,

Friday, December ·zs, ·1184

Ohio

Pomeroy.-.Middleport, Ohio
.

Poet's Corner-......._- - - - - Walking with arthritis---our praise to Thee.

God's Love
His love was DOt on a shoe string
dangling tbere ...
or on the glisteniog garland of the
Christmas tree so fair ...
His love was not on a snow blown
grouud

His love was found wondering
for a lost soul
that needed to be found
His love was given to show
love and care
For Christ a mighty Cross did bear
His love was shown from the Cross
wbcre He suffered and died
and the manger where be flrst
laid his head
His love was shown in the star
!bat led the wise men on tbat
night
To fmd the mighty, glorious
Savior of Power and of Might
His love is shown by His obedience
to our Father
wbicb art in Heaven
Born to die, from tbe cradle to the
grave
This is the blessed gift of love
be gave
For you and me
Our Lord, our God
We honor, magnify and give

Barbara James
Pomeroy

Songs of the Season
Christ our Lord and Savior
was born on Christmas Day
Oh linle town of Bethlehem
In a inanger He did lay ...

A Little Child

ATI.ANTA (AP)- People suffering from arthritis should follow
a walking program 10 maintain a
It only takes a little child
range-of-motion and use of arthritic
in Ibis world admista aowd
joints, advises the Arthritis Founto shed a tear or warm a smile
dation.
we're seeing Jesus in all oftbis...
According to !be foundation,
frequent exercise by walking will
Heartaches, happiness or cozy bliss belp keep joints flexible, build
It only takes a little child to draw
endurance and provide an overall
us near and fill witb cbeer
sense of feeling good without
Because they
tbe way of love undue stress.
Instilled in them from God above
The foundation recommends tbc
following:
It only takes a little child
- Srart slow. Be cautious tbe
He sees no bate but mercy
fust two weeks if you baven't been
mild and be will walk down
active for a while. Start with just 10
God's pathway
minutes of walking and gradually
He knows no otber way
build up your time to 20 or 30 minHis smile willligbt a winter day
utes of brisk walking.
- Walk on a flat, firm, level
It only taltes a little child
surface. Walking on steep grades or
to show our world God's adoration uneven surfaces may lead to hip,
and wonder of his love
knee or foot pain. Fitness trails,
It only taltes a little child
That was sent from Heaven above.
Barbara James
Pomeroy

know

Ob Come all ye faithful
Who are cbildren of tbe King
Rejoice, delight in !be Lord
And all His praises sing.
It came upon a midnight clear
A bright and guiding star...
We three kings of Orient are
Ttaveling very far

•

Away in a manger
A precious babe did lay
Nestled ever flO softly in a manger
filled with bay
While shepherds watched their
sheep that silent night
The fust noel
Hark the herald angels did sing
Glory to God on bigb our Savior
and our King
Barbara James
Pomeroy

shopping malls and quiet nei8Jlborboods with sidewalks all are good
Choices.
- Always warm up aud cool
down witb a stroll. Walk slowly for
five minute$ before increasing to a
brisk walk and tben finisb with tbe
same slow walk.
- Wear comfortable shoes of
!be correct length and width and
with shock-absorbing soles and
insoles.
- .See a doctor before starting
any exercise program 10 determine
tbe best types of exercise for you,
an appropriate duration for exercise
and your optimum exercise pulse

rare.

The Deily
.

1nterior chief Babbitt drops·
!plans to hike grazing fees
1

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By B. JOSEF HEBERT
Auodated l'rea Writer
1
· WASHINGTON - Interior
1 Secn:tary Bruce Babbitt is abani doning a plan to increase grazing
1 fees on fedetal range land, marking
I a bitter defeat for the Clinton
administration's effort to reform
public land policies.
The reversal, sbarply criticized
by environmentalists, was seen as
evidence of tbe political clout of
Western lawmakers in the new
Republican-led Congress and
desires by tbe administration to
appease them ..
Bowing to political pressures,
Babbitt said Wednesday !bat the
highly charged issue of grazing
' fees should be decided by tbe new
Congress. He postponed implemen, tatioo of the grazing regulations,
' wbicb were to go iDto effect next
month, for six months so Congress
·, could act.
• "A decision on fee structure
' will be deferred to Congress,·'
I Babbitt said in a statement, adding
: that he bad been unable to "devel: op a consensus on tbe fee issue"
1 among Westerners involved in tbe
. debate.
A doubling of fees paid by
; rancbers to graze livestock on federal land was the centerpiece of an

JOY
IDTIIJE
WORLD
ut

peace tmt//()f)t ndt

tltrougllout tltt fflorld.

Wilt Chamberlain, the 7-foot-1inch basketball srar, once tried to
play polo but couldn't find a big
enough pony.

RockyHupp
and Family
Ameriean Ceneml
Life &amp;: Accidem

I

DIIIAIION
Rcsearchcfl! iepon that
imaginatiVe: people-_t&lt;:li&lt;l to
have dreams that seem as n:at
. as life itself•.That's ~~~se
the creatiV«: or arlit&amp; :Jbind·ilas
a different peri:e!liiop of the "
·boundary bctween.realiey an/t.
fantasy.
·
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CONTRIBUTION- A1 a. part oftlaelr
pledge to COIIIII!IIJiity aerYic:e, employ- of V.et·erana Memorial 801pl~l C!NIIrlbuted 1everal
bUDdred food llnll ftir lbe underprlvllegecl dur·
log lblll bolicbly RUOn. In tbe pboto above, lbe

ambitious federal land reform pro- deslrUCtion of publiC laad. Rallcbposal tbat bas been a top priority of ers counter tbat t.be fedew I'IIIIC
tbe Inlerior Department sinre Bab- land often is inferior to private
bitt took over nearly two yean; ago. land, so tbe lower fees Me justified.
Currently ranchers pay monthly
In 1993, Babbitt tried to bave
fees of $1.98 per "livestock unit" Congress impose higher fees u
- a cow and calf or five sbeep well as otbcr ptqlOICd reform IIICIIto
on tbe more tban 270 mil- sures, but Western sen•&amp;on
lion acres of Interior Department blocked tbe legislation llld embarrange. Babbitt bad proposed tbat rassed tbc While House, wbicllllld
fee be increased to $3.96, phased In made grazing reform a lOp priority.
over three yean; beginning in 1995.
Then, Babbitt said be would
But ranchers were incensed at impose the new requiremenu
even tbe more modest fee proposal adminiuratively. In Hlarcb be
and about otber aspects of Bab- called bisher grazing fees • ellelibitt's plans !bat would give Wash- tial incentive to bcutt ~
ington greater control over bow of federal lands. He propo.sed a
ranchers use federal land. Babbitt gradual increase over three rcan
wanted incentives and controls to doubling the fees by 1997 to $3.96
ensure ranchers do not over-graze per livestock unit. Tbe pbaiiC-in
and abuse tbe land.
was to bave begun next montb.
While Interior officials suggestBut Babbitt said Wedlll'$day iD
ed Wednesday tbat those reforms a stalement lhar. be decided 10 poslwould still be pursued, it's possible pone tbe regulation at tbe request
Congress could short-circuit tbem of Sens. Larry Craig, R-Idabo, IIIII
as well. Many Republican lawmak- Pete Domenici, R-N.M., "to allow
ers as well~ as some Western Congress to enact aay ~
Democrats have seen tbe grazing changes" in federal gnwng poliissue as further evidence of too cies.
much government intrusion on peoBabbitt said Congress "sbould
ple's lives.
.
.
have an opportunity to make
But environmentalists have changes" and thereby perbapa
charged that tbe low fees and lack ''break tbrougb tbc gridlock aad
of regulations have led to yean; of solve the problems" of rage laDd
over-grazing and widespread reform.

graze

Rev.KennyBaker,-left,aacnospllaladmiDlstra-

.tor ScOtt Lucu cbedt out10111e or lbe food Items
beton they are loaded ~to a van. Tbe food wu

turned over to tbe Meigs United Metbodist
Coopentlve Parish for distribution.

IN THE SPIRIT OF GIVING •••
We're eztencUng our very best wishes to 10~ and yours
b.Oll,ll!ly
fnr.,-a

filled with.good friends and cheer. We're proud to be a
u_uB\
iine C:ODUDUIUty anci are aratei'ul for the opportunity to serve you.
•

WITH WARM REGARDS

~~~:::::~Fr:o:m:-:o:.u:r~home to yours, have a

great holiday. Thank you for your
loyal patronage.

•

Happy New Year!
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lt ·, _, l~, f

t· ~ t.~ ·.
1

Crow's Family
Restaurant
228 West Main
992-5432

Mason Furniture

,,''

As SR(}ff)) and frost bla11ket the land, ~~~~t're fiP(Jnntd by tltougltts of the many fiwe people
·
1111t ~lave /tad the pleasure to serve ;, the past year.
Merry Christmas and God bless you.

,.

.Me1 1y Christmas!"
,,..
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•••
•'

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Pomeroy

•

Co~pany

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:~

·•

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:

(304) 773-5592

2nd Street

Mason, WV

1/4 MILE NORTH OF POMEROY/MASON BRIDGE
'
MASON,WV

----

2400 EASTERN AVENUE (ACROSS FROM K-MART)
GALLIPOLIS, OH

It's Be~nning
To Look ALot
Like Christmas!

0

m

GWRY TO THJE NJEWBORN KJlNG

Opportunity's knocking
And we'd just like to say,
Hope your season is perfect
In every way.

•

Oh holy day, oh joyous day;
He sent His son. to show the way.
And wherever you may go,
May you bask in His holy glow
For those who seek, will see the light
And it will illuminate all that is right.
We'd like to join you and your family in praying for peace on earth
this holi~ay season. Tlulnk you for the good faith you've shown to us.
From the Vaughan Family To Youn

May it ·open the door,
For good tidings and cheer - Merry Christmas to all
And a joyous New Year.

CHRISTMAS

'

IS ATIME TO
REMEMBER
.

Best Wishes For A
Healthy, Happy Holiday!

HAPPY HOLIDAYS
•

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,• . __

Main Clinic Facility Will Be Closed·
Monday, Dec. 26

'F URNITURE
•·.; . .

1.~·

I

). ' ,

The Urgent Care Cen\er Will Be Open Holidays ~ Weekends.,
From 1 pm-9pm

Point Pleasant
J

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! _·,

;

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-~ ·Cor·ne-r

of--. - ·
General Hartinger
Parkway and
Pearl Street
·Midlj.leport, Ohio

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�Friday, December 23, 1994

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sharpen culinary skills with new cookbooks .
By CAROL DEEGAN
Aaoclated Press Writer
NEW YORK - At Christmas,
lhooghts turn to baking cookies.
· Blllehes and batches of delicious,
bomcmade cookies. Cookies for a
party; cookies to give as gifts to
family and friends.
Plus delicious breads, cakes and
odJer baked delights.
For recipes to fill your gift bas·
k:ets and boxes, the following fOOk·
books may provide inspiration.
Many include baking tips and techniques and explain bow to set up a
panay of baking ingredients:
Marilyn M. Moore, author of
The Wooden Spoon Dessert Book
and The Wooden Spoon Bread
Book, bas returned to the kitchen to
whip up a collection of old-fashioned, bomestyle cookies. The
Wooden Spoon Cookie Book is
filled with recipes for brown-sugar
gingerbread rounds, praline bars,
bisootti and sweet cinnamon crisps
(The Atlantic Monthly Press, $15).
Beatrice Ojakangas' Great Holi·
day Baking Bo~k features a large
section of recipes and baking tips
that takes readers from Advent
through Christmas Day. Dozens of
Christmas cookie recipes are
included - from brown-sugar
Christmas trees to ladyfingers,
cranberry-orange cookies and
meringue stars (Clarkson Potter,

$25).
The Art of the Cookie is displayed in over 75 recipes by Jann
Jobnson. The cookbook features ·
recipes for blueberry-oatmeal
cookies, gingerbread bears, peanut·
butter thumbprints and maple-sugar
leaves. With interesting and unusual photographs by Holly Stewart
(Chronicle Books, $14.95).
David E. Mono's 365 Ways to
Prepare for Christmas contains
recipes for almond buUer cooldes,
sugarplums, crunchy peanut drops
and more. Mono also tells readers
bow to malce edible Christmas IJeeS ·
and gift tags with cookies (Harper·
Collins, $16.95).
Christa Currie's Gingerbread
Houses is a complete guide to bale·
ing, building and decorating gingerbread houses (Doubleday,
$12.95).
For those who want taste and
texture, without a lot of fat, sugar
and salt, Pillsbury's new cookbook,
. Healthy Baking: Fresh Approaches
to More than 200 Fa110rite Recipes
is designed to strike a balance
betwen nutritional responsibility
and sheer eating pleasure (Viking,
$23.95).
Healthy Baking is organized
into five chapters - Cookies and
Bars; Quiclc Breads and Muffins;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 23, 1994

pastries, cookies, biscuits, clwco~
late confectioMry &amp; desstrJS by. '
~n Maree (Halpe!CoUins In~-~ .
national, $35), Betty Crocker '·
New Cake Decorating,' Cr~alivt
Cakes for Every Occasio/1"
(Macmillan, $1.5) and TM Christ..
mas Table: A Holiday Menu Cook-~
book by Carolyn Miller (Hiirper"'
Perennial, $17).

Yeast Breads; Cakes, Pies and
Tarts; and Desserts. All of ibe
recipes are accompanied by com·
plete nutritional analysis, including
dietary exchanges.
Marie Simmons presents a
parade of Bar Cookies A to Z,
mcluding chocolate shortbread
bars, orange and .cranberry ginger·
oat bars and ginger shortbread.
Witb photographs by Susan Marie
Anderson (Chapters Publishing,
$12.95).
More than 60 recipes are featured in Joie Warner's All the Best
Cookies including chocolate crin·
kles, lemon-lime shortbread, rum
balls and raspberry meringue
squares (Hearst Books, $8).
Piet Halbersradt's TM 11/ustrat·
ed Cookie begins with an assort·
ment of basic dough recipes, all of
which can be bandied and sbaped.
There's even a recipe for an incdi·
ble dough, ideal for making Christ·
mas ornaments (MacmiUan, $16).
The French Cookie Book by
Bruce Healy and Paul Bugat is a
511-page book filled with recipes
for Dutch chocolate macaroons,
almond turnovers and lemon bis·
cuits. With detailed explanations,
plus illusirations by Bugat
(William Morrow, $30).
Art Ginsburg's Mr. Food's
Favorite Cookies helps readers sat·
isfy their cookie cravings with

The Daily Sentinei-Page-13 .

:T he Daily Sentinel presents

tzlstmas

Lee

Emily
Hagwood

Son of

Niece of

Tyler Albert
Todd &amp;Jenny
Doczi

Mike &amp; Nancy
Gard

Son of

Jeff&amp; Marcy
Hedri.ck

Wt'rt SOLD ••••
On Neighbors Uke
Youl
We couldn't ~~~~ ubd for
• flnlll' community to do
· buiiMII with. MIIY your
home be blelled With

t:Ont.ntin.at, proepllrlty •nd

joy ~11 holldll'f Hlieon.

May Chiistmas and all the joy,- it
brings be yours throughout the
commg year.

JOt North Stcontt AYI.
MIIIDlEPOIT, OHIO
Office 992·2116
HOME 992-5692

Steven L. Story, Attorney at Law
236 W 2nd

992-6624

Pomeroy, OH

.

.'fi

Dtttlt S. Tllrtllr, lrobr

G)

.

\

·-- ~'

-~-

••

&amp;Troy .
Marshall

Brittany
Powers

Children of

Daughter of ·

· • Charlie &amp; Pam
Marshall

&gt; Robert Powers

Jeremy Wolfe
&amp; Nathaniel
Shuler
Children of

•.· David and Mary ·. ·
Shuler

Jordan Buck
Grandson of

Fred &amp; Pauline
HotTman &amp;
Addie Buck

~aM~ tuJ (f•• ~om ~

,.,

.·.·.

' . Dalton Ray
Spangler

We wish you a sleighful
of holiday happiness,
the beauty of a frosty night,
and memories warm enough
to make you glow. .

Son of

Dave &amp;Angie
Spangler

Jacob Todd
·Zuspan
Son of

··•Todd and Darla

Corey &amp;
Codey Fink
· Children of John
&amp;Angie Fink

Grandson of

Nathan
Rothgeb

Fred &amp; Pauline
HotTman&amp;
Addie Buck

Fred &amp; Pauline
HotTman

Kimberly
Hawthorne

Granddaughter of

Grandson of

.· --,

.

·-·•Joshua Dillon
Oldaker
Grandchild of

Daughter of

Bill and Nettie
Cross

Jim &amp; Alice
Hawthorne

Fred &amp; Pauline
HotTman

M8111Uf eltlud~

.·J"

You For Your Patronage.

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME HEATING &amp;COOLING
A HOLWAY GIFI' - For ltoUday 111'1-glv·
lag: llo-maile Jadl•n·•pleed walnats, left,
nlaull, eeater, IIDd l'ellive Christ·

1391 Safford Sdloolload, Galpols, OH

mas spirits. The Christmas spirits are no-bake
eooldes. (AP)

caj.......,._.

446-941

.........- ....... tf"

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The

I~ ~-LA

I

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I

Night

I

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II

~
~ t)le Chri~_mas Spirit

of peace on earth, .
goOd will to all, may we

·wish one and all an
especially Joyous Noel.

James

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BIRCHFIELD! I
FUNERAL HOME - ~- ~

1181n Street, PO. Box 188

·

Jarrod Hall
Grandtbild of

Best Holiday Wishes .
from the Management
and Staff of
McDonald'se
in Pomeroy

1

Grcat. ~asonl
Hope your Christmas runs smoothly in every Wi!f.
.~ We're always ~~ ,to be Qf service.
.

What You Want I•.Wbat
.

.' TOday!

Generai.Tire.Sales

·

.I

Middleport, Oblo

423 WEST MAIN STIDT

PO...OY, 01.

992·71,1

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I

•I

· Robert and
Addalou Lewis

Ryan &amp; Paula
Hall

Courtney N.
Thomas

Sharon
. Kathyren
Wright

Daughter of

You Get At McDopald'•

. .........R~,Oh.~
.................J. 'i.l..l••••~-~••••••l..!••••••~~••••••'•!~••••~!••••••~-~-•••••'•1•
,,
J

Son of

Son of

Keith &amp; Heather
Mattox

Miranda
McKelvey

Marlee
Hoffman

Grandchild of

Granddaughter of

Bill &amp; Hazel

Robe1rt &amp; Patricia
Staats

Fred &amp; Pauline
HotTman

•

I

c. Birchfield ·1

· Owner;c)pe~ator

GOOD CHEER
GOES A LONG WAY!

I

'

Dan&amp;We~dy

Thomas

· Daughter of

Tammy Wright

John Ryan
Tenoglia
Son of

Chris &amp; Jena
Tenoglia

Son of

Dave &amp;Jane
Graham

· Devon Graham ·
Baum
Son of

Tim and Martie .·
Baum

Great.Grandson of

··Betty "Granny"
Carpenter

�Pa~14-The

'

Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

· Friday, December 23, 1994

...Tuuday, December 13,1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ch'listmas
fln~els ....

htzlstmas

Summer
. Brooke Knight .·
Grandchild of

· • Vince &amp; Susan
Knight

McDaniel

Kimberly
Lynn Curl

Daughter of

Grandchild of

Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Frank Epple

Michelle
'
McDaniel

Britton
Mahr

Katie Woods
Daughter of

Son of

Tom &amp;Lisa
Woods

Ryan &amp; Carol
AnnMahr

·. • David &amp; Ginger •• ·
Doerfer

Aaron Austin
·. Maxson &amp; Kayle
Nicole Kloes
· . Grandchildren of

•· Papa&amp; Mama
Ellis

Cassidy Ann
Thcker

· Chantel Bauer

Daughter of

Mickey &amp;
Carrie Bauer

Son of

~

. Bob &amp; Bridget
Ritchie

Son of

Daughter of

John W.and
Gaya Thttle

•· David &amp; Ginger · •·
Doerfer

•.• Tanner Hysell
Son of

•-• David &amp; Penny
Hysell

Justin Michael . ·
Jacks
Son of

Sarah Hubbard
Grandchild of

Bob &amp; Donna
Byer

Jacob &amp;
Mackenzie
Sellers
Sons of

Michael &amp; Lisa •·
Jacks

Larry &amp; Catina •·•
Sellers

Nathaniel
Swan

Jonathon
Taylor

Allie, Cyle,
MacyRees

Son of

Grandson of

Clair Swan

-1' ,.,.,,.

OJ

· ·• Josie Doerfer •

Daughter of

· Chuck &amp; Heidi .· ·
Thcker

• Jessie Dylan
Ritchie

..

· Isabella Rose
Doerfer
Daughter of

·Just in the ·
St. Nick

. Robert &amp; Jane .•
Beegle

Grandchildren of ··

Jim &amp; Ginny
Rees

. Cheyenne
:· Maelene Doczi

.,

Daughter of .

~zme.

· •. Todd &amp; Jenny
Doczi

Michelli
Heather
· ·· Heaven LeeAnn :
Westfall

Erinne &amp;
·Danielle
Kennedy .

Daughters of ·

Children of

&amp;Theresa .··

Chelsea &amp;
Christopher
Holter

Charla Lynn
. Burge

Children of

Charlie &amp;
. •..·Penny Burge .· ·

.Daughter of

&amp;Thnya
Holter

.&gt;

Rogetta
Shoemaker .·.·

Blackston

Daughter of

Grandchild of

Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Roger

·Ann Evans

Channing
·. · Marie Burge
Daughter of

Charlie &amp;
Penny Burge . .

Shelby
Ohlinger

·Daughter Qf

Kend8 Kloes &amp;
Tini Lawrence

&gt;

Daughter of

•.• Samuel E~ans ·· ·
Son of

. Marlin &amp; Debbie
E~ans

Steve&amp;Amy
ObUnger

-.:

IJ
. I

•

L

Cooper
Daurteror

Mr. Mrs.
Greg Cooper

Bran..on
. Chase Bostick ·. ·
Doyle
Grandson of

Jack &amp; Polly .•
·. · . Bostick .·

&gt;.

Maxson
Son of

Ron &amp; Wendi
Maxson

Grandson of

· Miranda Ariel
Holter
Daughter of

Patty Weaver

John &amp; Penny ·
Harrison

· ·.· Timothy &amp; Tara •
Michael

J. T. &amp; Jorden .
Evans
Ann Evans

Abby Stewart •.

Chrissie
Gregory

•. Amber Siefke
Daughter of

Ross &amp; Barb
Siefke

Theodore and .·
. . .•. Nancy Willford .

DerekR.
Weber
Son of

·. Grandchildren of

Michael &amp;
•· Bobbie Holter ....

Paul &amp; Dorothy ·
Amberger .

Son of

Kevin &amp; Lisa
Lute

Son of

· Paul &amp; Dorothy •
Amberger

Daughter of

. La"1u~k!endy .

Son of

Grandchild of

Grandchild of .

. James~.
Harrison -

~

.

Brady Andrew •·
DeLong

Grandchild of

·. Michelle Anne •
Weaver

Sonof

Ryland
Michael

•

~yteKloes

.

Danielle
Nicole King
Gary &amp;Ruby
King

••· Roger &amp; Sheila

David Th.cker

•· Robert Austin
Lute

Keith &amp;
Marcella Weber

.

Christopher
Roush

Daughter of

Son of

Gary &amp; Susan
Gregory

Mike &amp; Bev
Roush

Josh Siefke ·
Son or

Ross &amp; Barb
Siefke

Son of

Lester &amp; Unda ·
Wise Jr.

�.
..
•

••

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 23, 1994

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel.

2~~~.~::~c~~~f~:'=---t . Ana/ysts
GARFIELD HEIGHTS - An attorney defending Mayor
Thomas Longo and others against a federal lawsuit filed by a former councilman plans to !lsk the U.S. Supreme Coun to Intervene.
Attorney Alan Johnson said then! wasn't enough evidenee to
prove. that Longo and Olbcr officials were Involved in the barassmenL ·He said tbcrc is not eoougb cvidenee to support former Councilman George Zilicb' s claim Chat Longo and others conspired to
luuass bim, and therefore that a trial is unnecessary.
Tbe petition to the Supreme Coun comes after a reeent decision
by the 6th U.S. Circuit Coun of Appeals in Cincinnati that Zilicb's
claims sbould be beard by a jury. ·
Zilicb flied bis lawsuit against Longo, Law Director David Mack
and several City Council members after the council approved legislation In December 1991 that sought to collect $10,200 Zilicb
· earned during his two years as a councilman.
The legislation said. Zilich should repay the money because be
d,id not meet dty residency n:quiremenrs.
. The U.S. comt of appeals ruled that the legislation was legal, but
a jury should bear Zilicb' s claim that city officials conspired to vandalize his home, slash his tires and make tbrealening phone calls to
bim and his wife. Zilicb is seelcing·$10 million in damages.
Palrick flanagan, Zilicb's attorney, said be was considering asking the Supreme Coun to reconsider the appellate court ruling that
City Council's legislation to collect Zilich's back pay was legal.

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!

· Woman faces arson charge

FIRST-COME - FIRST-SERVED BASIS I·
NO DEALERS PLEASE!
.

.

Begins Dec. 26th at 9 a.m. Ends Dec. 31 st, 2 p.m"
LIVE REMOTE

1\iAGic 1 01 DEC. 26TH, 3 PM-6 PM
1994 FORD FISO 412

Exaoutlve Sarlea, V-8, euto.,
tilt, crul•, luther, an .,_.-.
ORIGINAL
1
IIBRP $37 048
OW

'

'23,9

Signature Serlea, ~-a, auto.,
tilt, c,ru111, lelthtr, 111 powarl
~~~ .

ORIGINAL
MSAP$37,230

1994 FORD FISO 414

cl. 8 cyl., auto.,' air, PS,
XLT, ,Uiort bed, v.a, 5 apeed,
AM/Fit etereo, elr beg, bedlllner.l tilt, crulee, c81aeHe, all powerl
300

~:RETAIL

NOW

'24,9

$18,250

lOW

=RETAIL

'13,949

·.

$t9,250

Slglllture Serlea, V.f, euto.,
tilt, cruJ•, leather, all ,_r,

Y-8, euto., A/C, tilt, cruiM, Altll'lll
can., all power Including-.

~~

ORIGINAL
IISRP $21,125

IISRP $38,585

.lOW

'23,4

13,9

lOW

•9,949

aut, only e,ooo mllea.

ORIGINAL
IISRP$18,105

'17,

'1u1 _., .., , .

Ask YourS

•'

.,

1992 iERCURY GRAND MARQUIS

~

ltereo, mort.
ORIGINAL

IISRP$13,450

1951841

$143~0

1.992 FORD RANGER XLT

1993 FORD AEROSTAR "SPORT"

.I

lOW

'6,949

\

1991 HONDA CRI 51 COUPE

ORIGINAL

Convertlbla, 4 cyl. turbO, auto_
A/C, PS, PD, PW, PDL, tilt. crul...
NADARETAIL
lOW
$10,8110

IISRP$12,434

'9,7 49

$129~0Mt.

ORIGINAL
IISRP $22,754

$

I~·

I

ilr

I

1993 FORD MUSTANG

ORIGINAL
IISRP $20,347

1990 FORD PROBE GT

1993 FORD Fl50 412
300 e cyl., 5 apeed, air cond.,

$

1993 FORD f150 412

8 cyl., luto., A/C, AII/FII CIN., lilt,
crulH, 111 powtr.
1945001

6 cyl., 5 apeed, A/C, PS, PB,
AMJFII, more.
1944981

...,

lOW

NADARETAIL

1993 FORD TEMPO GL

'6,949

-

'7,849

1981 UNCOLN TOWI W

lOW

1994 FORD TAURUS Gl

'6,449
1

1913 FORD CROWN VIOORIJI

auto., A/C, PS, PD, PW, PDL, Y-8, autometlc, air conditioning
Ponr 181t, tilt, crulu, Altfll PS, PB, tilt, crut•, AIIFII cauatta
only 77,000 mllea.
-n'h.
lOW
WAS '

199_
3 FORD TAURUS Gl

4 cyl., euto., air cond., All/Fill V-8, 1uto., 11r cond., AII/FII
CIIHitl, ell power
119611 callltte, lilt, crul~. all power.
~101
ORIGINAL
·
ORIGINAL
IISRP$19,093 $ 9 9~0Mo.
IISRP $14,440 $

1989 OLDS II ROYAU
NADARETAIL
$11,150

V-1, euto., A/C, AII/FII Clle., lilt,
crulH, all power.
120240

1994 FORD AEROSTAR XLT

.

'6,949

'2,949

'11,9

Patrons.

.We wish

Thank you
for ltgbttng up
our year.

you all
the joys
of the
Christmas

~~fi••••§!•u••u&amp;.t.d

ffitSirlr4

Lvurtsrmasl

To all of our friends and patrons we say

200 E. Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-6255

thanks! Celebrate In style!

. Catny, .5lmy, Janice &amp; Sandy
CJ-fJt~U tB'£5lUpY S!UO'J{_
2nd Street, Pomeroy
992· 7606

gleu, etc.
NADARETAIL
$10,150

lOW

•9,9 49

Z 4 - with

a.- Down orll'lclt Equity.-

I F- 1101 lftcJudld,

...

' ll

4 cylinder, 5 epeed, PS, PB, AII/lFIII
- · alldlng baclc 111.... mare.

NADARETAIL

lOW ·

$10.450

Y-41, 5 apcl., air cond., PS,

Straight- Tucker &amp; q(pusfi
runera[Jlome

All/Fit cpaa., alldlng back gr..,,.
bedllner,long bed.

ORIGINAL
MSRP $12,434

lOW

'8,8
· Pomeroy, Ohio

41300 Laurel ClifT Rd.

'9,449

NAOARETAIL
$8,450

lOW

'5,949

:MERRY

We're proud to be of sc:rvit:c
throughout the year.

1990 DODGE 1250 ~. TON
CONVERSION VAN. V-1, auto., A/C,
PS, PB, PW, PDL. tilt, crulal,
All/Fit CIA.

NADARETAIL
$12,280

lOW

'11

Ravenswood, WV· (304) 273·21-52
Preneed-Atneed-Postneed .
SERVING JACKSON (WV.) MASON (WV.)
AND MEIGS (OH.) COUNTIES
JOE ROUSH
RUSSELL STRAIGHT

CHRISTM:AS

XLT, 4 cyl., 5 apd., olr cond.,
bed, AM/FM caaa., PS, PD,
m1111.
lOW
ORIGINAL
MSRPS12,780

Tlhoe Pkg., 4.3L v... elr cond.,
PB, AIIIFII CUMtte, more.

""'"*'" ~ .,.

1993 FORD RANGER 4X2

1992 FORD RANGER 412

1991 CHEV. S·lO 412

IOidtd.

The giftr are wrapped and flltrything's set the
festiVities to begin. And we want to add our good
wishes to your holidlly melry.
Mnry ChristmRs to all our fqyal patrons!

Meigs County 'Prosecuting Attorney John R.
Leritel, and staff: Christopher Tenoglia,
'L. Scott PoweU, Jeff Miller, Brian J, Reed,
Greta 'Riffle and Connie Dod.on.

1993 OIEV. 5-104X2

Extended Van, V-6, auto., dull .

Y-8,

I?,IMI

PB, Alt/FM ca..ette, ahort
Sherpl
lOW
NADARETAIL
St 2,8SO

All/Fit cau., PS, PD, 1lldlng

4 crt. turbo, 5 IJICI, A/C, PS, PB, V.f, 1uto., AJC, PS, PB, tilt, crul..,
PW, POL. tilt, crulll, AMn:M All/Fit canetta Super car.
Clttlttt.

1994 CHEV. ASTRO EXTENDED

T1hoe Pkg., v.., 5 8jleed, air

cau., power aunroof, only ze,ooo CIU., Ill power Including powe
mllea.
lOW
lOW
NATA RETAIL
NADARETAIL

'8,949

TIDINGS OF GOOD CHEER
for

00Mo.
199 *

1993 FORD T·IIRD LX

1990 MERCURY COUGAR LS

$11,450

Valued

cfosing Vee. 24
and wi{{ reopen Jan. 3 .
We wou{d [i~ to tfianf( a{{ o.ur
c~tomers for anotfier
successju{ year.
.
:J{appy :J{ofiiays
.·.
••.•.•..·
See you rte7(t year.
...• .

We hope the meaage of toN and the true .,UU of the
season maka U. Y"'Jlnto eadl hart In eNIY land.

1952271

4 cyl., 5 epeed, A/C, All/Fill Convertible, auto., A/C, 1llt, ~ru••"-'
cutltte, more.
1947381 111 power

1991 DODGE SHADOW ES

-

power equipment

4 cyl., 5 apcl., AJC, tilt. All/Fit ~ auto., A/C, tilt. crul.., AIIIFII

.,1125

~iddkportanaSyroc~e

992-5153
11 0 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY, OHIO .

-

10

you

SUGAR RUN MILLS

IN~I!

MULBERRY AVE.

OYOUS
Hope your
· Christmas is sparkling!

NOW AVAILAILE••• '95 UNGERS, EXPLORERS
": •- . · AND LINCOLN CONTINENTALS

May )'our holiday season
deliver toads of good fortune.
and bundles of cheer.

Thanks ·tor your support.

•dO'Brien
.AHIIMJI.At Law .
PO lEROY

...we offer our very best
wishes.to you and yours
this holiday season.

JeH Warner
Insurance
113 W. Second St•
Mlcfdl....
.

,

I

~·

'I1ie Corner 9{estaurants

GlOECKNER'S

4 cyl., euto., elr cond., AIIJ'F.. V-8, 1uto., A/C, till, crulu,

NADAPRICE

9vfeny Clitistmas

~

·. •

For Details!

1992 FORD ESCORT WAGON

18,825

:

~·

The Lowesf Cos{ of Driving
.Drive One ofThese New-To-You Vehicles ·
and Only Pay On About HALF!

4 cyl., I lpcl., A/C, PS, PI, tilt
crulie, AWFUcua..

P'~"~..,~~~-.!M'.~'f'~'"'g

$11,550 .

: . ,;. NEW -·TO ~···YO'U

1992 FORD ESCORT GT

deal:
KKR signed a stock swap deal
in September to buy Borden for
about $2 billion, or $14.25 per
share. KKR' s payment would be in

SYRACUSE

PB, Alt/FM caaHtta, eliding
gl...,more.
NAOARETAIL

lOW

To All Our

CHANCEY'S
fOOl MART

1993 FORD FISO

4 cylinder, 5 8jlftd, air cond.,

First they've got to get sharebolder approval for the $1.8 billioo

the form of stOck in RJR Nlbilw'
Holdings. tbe food and ciprelle
conglomerate it aintruls.
Although tbat amount wu
slightly above Borden 'a recent
market price, it was well below h!J·
toric highs and prompted some
shareholders to accuse Borden of
failing to get the best ~e_al .

wi{{ 6e

season.

$18,350

4 cyl., autO., A/C, tilt, crul•, Allll'lll \loB, auto., A/C, tilt. crul•, AII~FIII
Cll8., ell ponr Including
caaa., Ill power Including powttrJ

ORIGINAL
ltSRPSt5,200

lOW

Chrome Pkg.
NADARETAIL

1994 FORD T·IIRD lX

-.

CLEVELAND - A womari who allegedly lried to frrebomb a
car bas been charged with arson, police said.
·
Janet Short, 28, of Stuart, Va., was arraigned Wednesday in
Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court and is being beld in lieu of
$50,000 bond.
Sbort was arrested after the attempted frrebombing of another
person's car Monday left her son, 11 , severely burned, pollee said.
The boy was listed in good condition today at MetroHealtb Medical Center.
Cleveland Frre Battalion Chief John Yarson said Short lried to
burn a car she thought was owned by a friend of her former
boyfriend. Yatson said she apparently was upset that tbe car' s
owner bad given her ex -boyfriend a ride from Virginia.
Police said she fli'st tossed a plastic bottle filled with gasoline
and conllilnlng a wick at the car. When the boule didn' t ignile, sbe
dropped a burning piece of paper into the bowl of gasoline and it
ignited, burning her spn, police said.

something with some 'growth

potential."

tion.9·

.

4X4, Y-41, auto., air cond., PS,
~UII'· •I tilt, crulll, All/Fit C..IIIHit,l

lOW

S

By PAUL SOUHRADA
'
That's due to bigb wbeat prices
Auocleted Prea Writer .
and the growing presence of Her. COLUMBUS - After three sheXFoodsCorp.
months of courting Borden Inc., a
'That's always been Borden's
New York investor is ready to problem," Bivens said. " No maucr
complete its ~Ito take over where they turned, they went up
the troubled consumer products against bigger and better compeucompany.
tors."
. Kohlberg Kra~is Robert &amp; Co.
Even while talks were taking
said Wednesday 11 bad more than place, Borden, was busily spinning
enough shareholder support to off pans of its business.
force a merger with ColumbusNow may be a time to start
based Borden.
looking for acquisitions, Bivens
Now what? ·
said.
" Most of the speculation sur"They should try to get into
· rounds pasta as the core upon
which they'll build," said Terry
Bivens, a food industry analyst
· with Argus Research Corp. io New
York. "That's a dicey proposi-

1994 NISSAN lUNG CAB

1994 MERCURY SABLE

study Borden's future

Our entire ataff would like to wiah you a
merry, magical Christmu.

Pllft PLUS luI 0 Pllft
POMEROY; OHIO
992·2139

d

MEIGS COUNH HEALTH
DEPARTMENT

j

�•

'
Friday, December 23, 1994

'

~ Pe~18-The Deily Sentinel

Fride~Decernber23, 1994

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

On Springer's show, talk's cheap
I

ByrRAZIERMOORE
slept with his wife's aunt and
AP Television Writer
cousin (and maybe you didn't). ·
NEW YORK - "They say:
No, the key distinction in
The~ people in bed wilb tbem,
Springer's mind is lbat, UDiike you
lbe beUer! Mouday on Springer!"
or me, ·bis guests have simply c.bo·
If you missed that Jerry sen 10 go public.
Springer Show oo group sex, don't
This is lilce arguing lbat on the
worry. Tbere's plenty more where subway, tbe difference between a
it came from. Day in, day out, Ibis commuter and a flasher is pants.
3-year-old, Chicago-based talk
Springer, a man who .claims
show (cbeck local listings) bas one never 10 have warCiled bis own talk
on its mind: skank:y-panky.
show nor anybody else's, adruits be
' I Want My Man to Stop bas no idea why anyone would bare
Watc.bing Porn!"
all on 1V.
.
"He Wants Her to Quit Bikini
Not that it matters. "If they
Contests!"
don't mind showing what they are
"My Boyfriend Turned Out 10 let's look," be ~ys. "This is basi:
Be a Girl!"
_ cally c;o!erll!i'!ment."
· Each day's non-issue is seized
upon hungrily by Jerry's guests, a
crop of waiters, louts and sbowoffs planted onstage in their lineup
of club c.bairs. Meanwhile, tbe host,
a former Cincinnati mayor, wades
iniO his current constituency, tbe
bopped-up studio audience wbose
role it ii to fan tbe flames be
ignites.
Thus does tbe tackiness unfold,
and Springer receives it witb the
dull but solicitous gaze of smneone
who bas spent too much time in
. topless bars.
Wbicb maybe be bas. Gender· A blrssed and beautiful
benders and adulterers are big witb
Cllf'istmas 10 you and yours.
Jerry. But even bigger is tbe female
bosom: If his show is any indicaWf apprtciOtf _-y()Uf'
tion, Springer bas a breast ftxation
patronage and support.
tbat rivals Maidenform's.
For instance, one recent
Springer investigated who are sexi\
·er: large-breasted women or smallbreasted women. In a multievent
Emmogene Hamilton
• competition, comely specimens of
both body types vamped onstage in
Meiga County
teddies, and less, for tbe whooping
Recorder and Staffstudio audience.
Then Springer mounted bis siOOI
Judy, Kay and Karen
· 10 deliver a "Final Thought," bis
daily bid 10 redeem tbe hour's rot
with a serrnonette. This time be
, piously told viewers tbat ''a ~uy :;p~•••••••-•••-•••-•w•iiiilrt~~~~~~::U
wbo sees a woman only for ber R
111
11
breasts is really tbe biggest boob of I
ne value the fncndships we've
I
all."
built with customers like you.
Granted, no one wbo objects 10 i
.Hope you all have a happy holiday !
Jerry's peep show bas to watch. I
:11
But bow long can you overlook the
11
tortured, self-justifying logic it
trades on? ·
I
11
11
Chatting wi tb a reporter, 1
Springer jnsists tbat his program I
I
does notbmg more tban "turn the 11 .
I
camera on what really exists in our 11
country. They're really out lbere. I :
Wben people say 10 me, 'Where do 1
~ you find these guests?' I say, 'They 1

and tacky

·

thin'

(flffBRA1f AU 60Dl

1

I

I

1

his show features oeoole whose
, primary difference from tbe rest of
:us istsn •t tba!t!~jobdy, for indastance,
. wan 10 qw ""'
as a y care
:worker to become a booker (and
' maybe you don't) or tbat Ric.bard

I
I
I

'

Merry Christmas
Our Entire
&amp;taff, Wishes
You and ·
Your family
A HAPPY
HOLIDAY

1
I

r---:::;::::::--,-i
/l/l f1/J
""'V

St. Rt. 124, Po•roy, OH.
992·5111

1
1

1
I

1

I
1

BANK'S C'ONSTRUCTION

_I 124 West Mal•
1

~

92_ 5009

1
,_

Middleport, OH _ ~

·------------~----------'
bEAUTY

LOVE

Once parents have decided on
·The (Masslllon) Independent
home education', tbey face deci:: MASSILLON, Ohio (AP) sions on bow to proceed. Groups
. ·Donita Jewell, 13, never goes to such as Christian Home Educators
·:School. Sbe doesn't have to. She Stark County Association can help.
',learns a• home, and sbe loves it.
CHESCA' s secretary, Charla
~ : Donita's. sister Cindy, 15, Ostergren of North Canton,
&lt;doesn't go either. Sbe sometimes answers home education questions
: wishes sbe could.
every week. More tban 200 fami, . For the past five years, Cheryl lies are members, and the organiza. and tbe Rev. Michael Jewell have tion bas become its own school dis; schooled lbeir daughters at bome trict of sorts 'wilb its own form of
· because tbey believe their cbil- socialization.
:men's education is lbeir responsiOstergren decided on bome·bility.
based education '[or her children,
. As home education becomes ages II, 7 and 4, when she and ber
·. more popular and more widely ·· husband began lbe ftrst of a several
accepted, parents, educators and job-related moves.
students debate when and if it is the
"I thought. what can I do wrong
:·best approach to learning.
in kindergarten !bat we can't ftx if
: The decision is an individual we goof up,'' sbe explained.
, one, and it can be difficult. It's
That was seven years ago. And,
:impossible for one family 10 deter- although sbe is not a certified
• mine wbelber home-based educa- teacher, sbe said ber children are
: tion wiD be a success by looking at progressing well.
:other families' successes or fail"Many, many home-scboolers
• ures.
are teachers. But most adults who
: Christine Dieringer, assistant bave gone through bigb school
:principal at Jackson Higb, said it's have pretty mucb mastered elemen' also impossible to determine if a tary 1001s."
I child lias done better at home than
Stili, Ostergren said the pfQCCSS
!be would have in schooL
involves a lot of work.
1 "How do you compare wbere
"It takes such a commitment;"
!bey are on an academic level when sbe added. "Sometimes you ;want
they eome back?" Dieringer said. to flag tbe school bus down and
"You don't kno·w where they sendthemout."
would have been otherwise."
Ostergren sees numerous advan-

DON SWISHER
ASHLAND

I1·
I1

~~::ger goes on to argue that I

' are

:By KIM Md)()UGAL

Through the trees and in the air,
On the fann and In the city,
Joy Is spreading evei}-Where,
Making one and all feel giddy.
Let spirits ring, and hear bells chime
For our King Is born-it's Christmastlmel
So let us join In celebration
Of His most wonderful of all creations.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

be blessed with

an abundance of
and Hope.

I
'.
'' '

..'
'•-

.
..
•

~-- JHe~PY

.~- ·hFishmes ·
'

f

Plumbing l HMIIng

'

•'

112-21174

.

....
!····J..

I L.~=::: J

I

~I

lp...,••••I. .

:
I

•I

'

'

·CROW&amp;CROW
Attorneys-AHaw
Pomero~! ~_hj&lt;?_

_

Neighbors!
MIDDLEPORT
TROPHIES &amp;-TEES

r

·second·Row: Jim Freeman, Charlene Hoeflich, Bob ~twood .•'
ThirCI Row: Dave'Harris, Mike _Jenkins
.-

-MEIGS COUNTY LITTER CONTROL '
992-6360
FUNDED BY:
Ohio Deplutment of Natural Ft810UIQIII

DMelon ol Recycling end lJitef' PrewnUon

!

:'

II

- and you11 with muC:h happl111111. We apprecicn your support.

MIDDLEPORt,
OHIO
'
.

;

.

The Daily Sentinel

We wish you great
joy at this time
of year.

May this be your
happiest Yule ever!

K&amp;C
JEWELERS
212 East Main,
Pomeroy
cm
992-3785

..

know no bounds on
this joyous occasion.

We appreciate your friendship and support.
Merry Christmas to one and all.

Meigs County Republican Party

ROSE'S
EXCAVATING
IACINE, OHIO

Holiday. Behold. Inc
WISh Souiof Is Bofn

Merry Christmas
from aU of us .at
Pomeroy Flower
Slwlp. Tlwink you for
your patronage

May the warm ctow
of Christmas
light up your life.

SNOUFFER
FIRE' &amp; SAFnY
992·7075

..

Wtth Heartfelt Thanks

May your sJadncae

!£Thanks For Yqur
!C Business
! GRUESER &amp; SON

St. Rt. 124 Radne, Oh
614-949-2612

1'hatdl you.·

The serenity of rhe
holidoy Is a yearly
m1racle ... ler us nor
f.orger rhe flrsr one!

1• - Were tnmmtn~ :he season

you

God Bless
You AU

·christmas

•.

3 1/2 mites past Southern High

request.
" We review it to meet Ohio's
law for home education,'' Drage
said.
Ohio laws for borne-schooled
c.bildren aren't strict
CHESCA member Kathy Hartman of Massillon, wbo homeschools ber six children, said her
children's days are filled witb tbe
right kiDd of socialization.

Happy

.

suppoRT.

~

tages to teaching her children at
"I want to be part of activities home, they're home."
·borne.
like band and choir," Cindy said.
Steve Smith, pupil services
"In a school setting, everyone "I' II be able 10 make more friends. direciOr for lbe Perry School Dis(goes) at tbe same rate. My chll- In school, they form their own trict, said lbe tack of rules and regdren go at their own pace," sbe cliques. If I could have home- ulations os "pan of lbe concern.
explained. "I have very structured sc.booling and friends also, I would It's just real loose.''
plan lessons, and tbey have a lot of take it"
Darlene Drage, associate in spesocializarino. We play soccer, baseThat's a possibility. There is a cial needs student services at tbe
ball, basketball, gymnastics and section in Ohio's bome education Stark County Board of Education,
swimming in the afternoons."
law that allows for pan-time school said no value judgments are made
Stefan, 7, and Anna, 4, also attendance with the district's w~ approving a bome education
practice lbe Suzuki melbod of vio- approval.
lin, and Kyle, II, plays lbe piano.
Among many educators, the
Ostergren said sbe spends about jury still is out on bome-scboolipg.
$1,200 each year for ber c.bildren's
Off tile record, some public
curriculum, but could do it for sc.bool officials say home education
$900 by cutting corners.
is just as good, and perhaps better,
Although borne-schooled stu- tban public schools. Olbers, like
dents don't receive bigb school Massillon's Assistant Superintendiplomas from lbe district in wbicb dent Ron Green, say nothing can
tbey live, most bome-sc.bool groups · replace the sc.bools.
pass out lbeir own diplomas.
''I tbink all children, unless
Ostergren said college admit- there are extenuating circumtance is no problem for most borne- stances, should be in lbe classroom
schooled students. She knows of under tbe direction of a certified
more lban 150 colleges lbat accept teacher. And tbe socialization ~
students sc.booled at home, includ- bow do you duplicate lbat in your
ing the University of Alaoo.
own borne?" Green said.
The Jewells' daughters are older
Concerns most educators have
lban tbe Ostergrens, and their _cur- about bome-scbooling can be
riculums are more dlfficull
grouped into two categories: lack
Still, Cheryl Jewell believes tbe of regulation and lack of socializajob is ber responsibility. Until now, lion.
home-schooling was a success for
' 'I wish tbe. state bad provided
ber family.
for more supervision," Dieringer
But Cindy's feelings bave. · said. "Most educators bave little
changed. She wants more friends.
knowledge of it; once they're

·:

•
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of

~-JOtH.-.'• hoping that
holid,ay season provides

Tbrougb Dec. 31, Victoria~!
CbristlltM at Hauch House, CiDdDnati.
Tbrougb Dec. 23, Holiday
Lights Festival, Cleveland
Metroparts ZOO. Cleveland.
Through Dec. 31, The Nutailcker, Stale Theatre, Cleveland.
Through Dec. 31, Ludlow Falls ·
Lighting Display, Ludlow Falls.
Dec. 16-27, The Nutcracker,
Music Hall, Cincinnati.
Dec. 17-18, 28, Christmas of
Yesteryear, Historic Lyme Village,
Bellevue.
Dec. 26-31, Slei·gb Rides
Through Spiegel Grove '&amp; Candlelight Tour, Rutber(ord B. Hayes,
Presidential Center, Fremont.
Dec. 27. Kwanzaa, Akron Art
Museum, Akron.
Dec. 31, First Night DayiOn,
Dayton.
Dec. 31, First Night North
Ridgedale, North Ridgedale.
Dec. 31, Ftrst Night Toledo '95,
·Toledo.
.
Dec. 31, Opening Night '95,
Warren.

'
'

: vvitllallthebeStfOf'youand
: , your loved ones!

MIKE SWIGER
INSUUNCE

Through March 5, Edward
Potbast, 1857-1927, Cincinnati
Museum of Art, Cincinnati.
Through March 5, Manet to
Toulouse-Lautrec: French Impressionist &amp; Post lmpessionist Prints
&amp; Drawings, CiJicionati Art Museum, Cincinnati .
Through April 9, Richard Bitting: Nine Summer Haiku, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati.
Through April 15, Les Animaux
de Ia Foire (carousel &amp; fairgrounds
art), Cincinnati Museum of Art,
Cincinnati.
Tbrougb May 14, Lithographs
of Sbinodo Toko, Cincinnati An
Museum, Cincinnati.
Through May 19, " Destiny in
Space", Orninmax Theatre, Museum Center at Cincinnati Union Terminal, Cincinnati.
Through June II, S tic bed,
Woven &amp; Plaited; Contemporary
Craft Traditions of Africa, Miami
University Art Museum, Oxford .
Tbrougb Dec. 23, The Nutcracker, Victoria Theatre, DayiOn.

DECK
THE

•

;

ChRiSTMAS

JOY

Health, Happiness

Art. Columbus.

~ ~~~~~~~~~~

!

AND

lllay your holidays

Hou:;c, Cincinnati.
Obio Museum, Portsmouth.
ty Museum Christmas Open House,
Through Dec . 24, BEEHIVE,
Tbroudt Jan. I, ClifiOn Mill's Tiffin.
·
Cincinnati Playhouse in the J'ark, Holiday l:igbting Display, Yellow
Through Dec. 24, A Christmas
Springs.
Cincinnati.
Carol, Great Lakes Theatre FestiThrough Dec. 30, Victor_ian
Through Dec. 23, Christmas in val, Ohio Theatre, Cleveland.
Holiday, Hower House, Akron.
. tbe American Tradition, Ohio VIlThrough Jan. 1, Cbristian !Ddian
Through Jan. 8, Fantasy Spec- lage &amp; Ohio Historical Society, Christmas, Gnadenbutren Historitacular, Carousel Dinner Theatre, · Columbus.
cal Park, Gnadenhutten.
Akron.
Through Dec. 23, Christmas
Through Dec. 31, A ChristmaS
Tbrougb Jan. I, Christmas Won- witb tbe Toyrnaker, Hale Farm &amp; Carol, Cincinnati Playhouse in tbe
derland at Falrbaven, Ricbland Co. Village, Balb.
Park, Qncinnati.
Fairgrounds, Mansfteld.
Tbrough Dec. 31 , Children's
Through Dec. 31 , Kingwood
Through Jan. I, Ohio's Holiday Wonderland, Lucas Co. Recreation Hall Cltrisbnas Display, Mansfteld.
Festival of Lights, Clay's Park Center, Maumee.
Through Dec . 30, Ashland
Resort, Canal FuliOR.
Through Dec. 31, Christmas at County Museum Cbrisbnas Open
Tbrougb Jan . I, Wildlights, COS!, Columbus.
House, Ashland.
Columbus Zoo, Powell.
Through Jan. 15, Expatriate
Through Jan. I, Christmas at
Through Jan. I, Holiday Skies Castle Mac-0-CI~ee, West Liberty. American Artist; Taft Museum,
Planetarium Show, Cincinnati
Through Jan. I, Lights Before Cincinnati.
Planetarium, Cincinnati.
Tbrougb Jan. 22, Triumph of
Cbrisbnas, Toledo Zoo, ToledO.
Tbrougb Jan. 9, Festival of
Through Jan. I, Rudd's Christ- Color &amp; Light: Ohio' s ImpressionLights, Cincinnati Zoo, Cincinnati.
. ists &amp; Post Impressionists, Springmas Farm, Blue Creek.
Through Jan. 15, Louise FishThrough Jan. 2, Holiday Dolls, field.
man: Art &amp; Identity, Akron Art McKinley Museum, Canton.
Through February 26, Artists &amp;
Museum, Aleron.
Through Dec. 18, Train Rides Printers: Prints &amp; Books from lbe
Through Jan. I, Boy Meets Girl, wilb Santa, Indiana &amp; Ohio Scenic Late 19th Century, Toledo MuseCleveland Play House, Cleveland.
um of Art, Toledo.
Railway, Mason.
Through Dec. 30, Stars &amp; DiaThrough March 5, Landscape as
Jbrough Jan. 2, Holiday Lights
monds: c;rystal from the Harold Celebration, Akron Zoo, Akron.
a Metaphor, Columbus Museum of
Micldetbwaite Collection, Southern
Through Dec. 28, Seneca Coun-

:Home schooling triggers parent, educator debate

(RfAUONS

INGELS FURNITURE
AND JEWELRY

The Dally Sentinel-Page 18

;Current, upcoming Buckeye activities
. COLUMBUS (AP) - Here is a
list _of current and upcoming Ohio
fesllvllis and events as provided by
tbe Ohio Division of Travel and
Tourism:
_ Through Dec. 31, Regional Art
Show, Jobnson -Humrickbouse
-Museum, CoshociOn.
Through Jan. 27, Smarter Than
.You Think, Cleveland Children's
·Museum, Cleveland.
_ Through Jan. 8, Landscape as
~etapbor: Visions of American at
tbe End of lbe Century, Columbus
Museum of Art, Columbus:
Tbrougb Jan. 15, Visiones del
Pueblo: The Folk Art of Latin
America, Toledo Museum of Art,
-Toledo.
Through Jan. I, Dianamation's
Dinosaurs, Cincinnati Museum of
Natural History, Cincinnati.
Through Dec. 30, Ohio Metals':
.A Legacy, Ohio Craft Museum,
Columbus.
· Through Dec. 31, Star of Beth. lebem Planetarium Sbow, Hoover. Price Planetarium, Canton.
. Tbrougb Dec. 31, Toys and Toy
, Furniture Exhibit, John Hauck

!P -

NOEL

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. • DDLEPOII', OliO

Race be with you.

BLUE SIREAK
.CAB CO.

Pomeroy
Flower·Shop

992..C71

MIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

Delightf

Season

J,!ere's-hopifl9 ~l'l01idays bring a speaial magic to you ond -yours.
Thanks so much for helping us build our business this year!

colkdlbk bean

..

The Ohio RIVe

r Bear Company
204 N. Second Avenue
Middleport. OH 45700

992-6454

George V: VOinovtch, Gowmor

L

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,.

1

'

['I

•

�Pa~2G-The

Dally Sentinel

"--mber .23, 1994
.
_f:rtd..u '...........

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·
..-

.

Display keeps alive memories of camps :
By JULIE y AMAMOTO
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES- It's a part of
history America wishes it could
·forget, hut with the help of a small
roup of volunteers, a downtown
~useum wants to make sure everyone remembers.
Tbe Japanese American National Museum literally bas brought
back a piece of a generation's
haunting history- the remains of
a barrack from an internment camp
at Heart Mountain, Wyo.
A wartime executive order sent
120,313 Japanese-Americans to
more than 10 military relocation
camps and detention centers, where
rows of these shed-like buildings

became their homes from 1942 to long structure bas been built with
194S . Whatever memories Jlew materials ro look as it did
internees stiU carry with them, they when more than 10,700 people
aU remember lbeir barracks. ·
arrived at the Heart Mountain
Families ,&amp;ave up West C:::oast camp, a few miles northeast of
homes and businesses for a 20-by- Cody, Wyo.
20-foot room in a wOoden barrack
A replica of a typical camp
insulated with tar paper. They were guard tower stands about two stoissued cots and blankets, a single ries above the reconstructed barlight bulb and a coal-burning stove. rack.
There were no ceilings, and doors
Inside the museum, maps of the
locked from the outSide.
10 major camps are displayed
Half of the weathered barrack in together with home movies, hunthe lot across the street from the dreds of photographs and other
museum is one of the originals, dis- mementos of the camps. Internees
assembled by 32 volunteers and can contribute bandwrillen stories
shipped to Los Angeles' Little to memory books and place model
Tokyo to be reconstructed,
·barracks on camp maps to mark the
The other half of the 120-foot- blocks where they lived.

Among the volunteers who jour- area and we saw these rows and
neyed to Heart Mountain this fall rows of barracks an~, well, we
was Bacon Sakatani, who is credit- didn't kn~w w!Jat to thmk.
ed with the idea for the exhibit.
''We JUSt did .what we were told
Sakatani was interned at Heart thinking aU of thiS was leg~ . When
t.:fo~ntain with his parents and four . you bave armed. guards. ~ling you
Siblings, who had all worked on want to do! you just do 11.
their producti.ve West Covina veg~e ~ured computer programetable farm before the war. He says mer s vo1ce nses as he gesnares to
arriving at the camps was a disori- the barrack. .
•
enting experience for the Issei and
"I look at ll today, ~d I~ t
Nisei, or first and second genera· believe that we wen.t to a cam~.like
lion immigrants.
that," says Sakatanl, now ~5. We
"We received only one week's would never do that today. .
f
notice that wl: would be sent to this
AI!:hough about 70 pe.r~ent , ~
camp," says Sakatani, wbo turned those 1n1emed were Amencan Clh13 on the train ride to Wyoming,
''We came to this desolate desert

Tinker ,b ook examines TV industry
By FRAZIER MOORE
says. "At least. I hope I wouldn'l
AP Television Writer
It's forgetting your first responsiNEW YORK - As with the bility- to the audience."
rest of the world, the Romper
Meeting with a reporter in a
Room of network television is mid-Manhattan hotel su1te that hapmanaged by Do Bees and, more pens to look out on Tinke~'s former
often, Don't Bees. Grant TmkCl is · workplace, the. RCA Building a notable example of the former.
whoops, make that GE Building So here's the buzz on NBC of be is tallcing abou! his new book,
the early 1980s, when, as its chair- Tinker In Television: From Generman, Tinker led the network back al Sarnoff to General Electric
from the brink and made it No. 1:
(Simon &amp;: Schuster), which be co• DO BE willing to lea'l!e talent- wrote with former NBC associate
ed people alone to do what you Buil Rukeyser.
hired them to do.
· The book is a revealing memoir
• DO BE patient with your pro- of a man who first came to NBC in
grams, nurture them, and leave 1949 when its founder, the leg- ·
them on long enough to let the endary General David Sarnoff.
audience come to share your enthu- "was sliD in the building- be was
·
up there on the 53rd floor and I was
~moo BE concerned about your delivering mail on the sixth."
viewers, as well as your numbers.
Tinker In Television is also a
Almost a decade after be left valuable crash course in the history
NBC, Tinker can't belp gelling of the TV business, which Tinker
exercised .about the grudg~ match was there to witness and help elebriefly waged between CBS and vate.
his former network as they fired
Besides three bitches with NBC,
their medicat shows against each be worked the other side of the
other on Thursday nights.
street by founding MTM Enterpris""I wouldn't bave done that," be es, the creative salon that produced

some of TV's most beloved programs, including Lou Grant, Tht
Bob Newhart Show and, of course,
the series that starred his business
partner and then-wife, Mary Tyler
Moore.
"I just bad the good luck to be
around people who did the kind of
work that the audience appreciates," says Tinker, a man wbo1 at
68, is as well-known for his self. deprecating manner as for his lean
good looks and California tan.
"The success just rubbed off on
me.''

In 1981. he brought this low-key
approach back to NBC, which, in
terms of earnings, ratings, programs and morale, barely bad a
pulse.
•
"
Five years later, when Tinker
left to return to independent production, NBC was flush - and,
with its parent RCA, about to be
bought by General Elecbic.
Referring to GE boss Jack
Welch, Tinker writes, "I left bim
an NBC that was the 1927 New
York Yankees, and some good
advice about bow to keep it that

way:·

Bank copes ~ith man's 8 miiUon pennies
DILLONVALE (AP)- It's
$80,000 in cash. But Ray Amoross
would just as soon take a check
next time.
'Amoroso helped a Steubenville
man deposit 8 million pennies weighing about 48,000 pounds at Steel Valley Bank N.A., where
Amoroso Is the collection manager.
"Ob, it was a back-breaker, I'm
telling you,·' Amoroso said.
Tbe 70-year-old mf!n, who
asked the bank to withhold his
name, coUected the pennies over 6S
years. He contacted the bank about
a month ago.
Tbe pennies were hauled to the
Dillonvale bank in 40 garbage ·
cans. It took four days to move
them by pickup truck. DiUonvale is
118 miles east of Columbus.
. "I can't guarantee there's 8 million there, but my wild guess is
there is," Amoroso said Wednesday.
One person is working . on
counting the J)ennies and a couple
of volunteers are helping to feed
the counting machine, Amoroso .
said.
"The pennies are relied. We
have to break those rolls open to

Plna Colada Spritz: Omit
vanilla in basic dough recipe; add I
tablespoon pineapple juice and 114
teaspoon rum extract. Stir in 1/2
cup finely chopped coconut Frosting: In .small bowl combine I cup
powdered sugar, 2 tablespoon,s
softened butter, 2 tablespoons
· pineapple preserves and I tablespoon pineapple juice. Beat at
medium speed, scraping bowl
often until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 '
minuies. Spread on cooled cookies.
If desired, sprinkle with toasted
coconut.

make sure they're all pennies," he
said,
Amoroso said the counting is
moving pretty rapidly, but be estimated thai the earliest it will be
done is Feb. I.
"If not, at-Ieasi by Easter," he
said.
The machine will place the pennies in bags holding $50 each,
Each week the bags will be deliv'

· ered to the Federal Reserve Bank in
Cleveland and the man's account
will be credited, Amoroso said.
The man began collecting the
pennies when be was 5, according
to bank officials. Now, be bas
decided to trnde in his chl!!lge for
cash,
Over 65 years, be would have
had to collect 123,077 pennies
every year- or about337 per day.

But under the management of
Welch and the man be put in Tinker's old office, Robert Wright,
NBC was soon the cellar-dweller
again and the operative question
echoed that of Casey Stengel: ·
"Can't anyone here play \his
game?''
Even now, it's bard to say.
More than inside baseball, the
issues Tinker raises in his book
make for interesting reading. They
also are a balm for viewers fed up
with such network antics as schedules that have the stability of a
stock-market ticker.
"Our practice was to make a
judgment about a show," Tinker
recalls ''and, if we deemed it
wortbwbile, to really stay with it
until it succeeded." Two shining,
oft-cited examples of Tinker's
steadfastness: Hill Street Blues, a
slow starter in 1981, and, one year
later, Cheers, a consistent ratings
flop - that is, the first of its .11
seasons.
Neither series wiU soon be forgouen, nor will the Thursday night ·
time slot each so dependably occupied.
Question: Could most viewers,
· or even Bob Wright, recall what
show occupied most network time
slots as recently as last week? Or
want to?

zens,, President Franklin Roosevelt stedord~ srnt ~em to~~~~~
that dot
e an ~apes. .
;
1
zona, Arkansas, Cab formal Co~- ·.
orado •. Idaho, Texas, Utap anlf
Wyommg.
'•'.
. J~e roll ~ the ;~~cat:lli
me u es actor eorge
e1, w 0..;
played Mr. S~l~ ~n S~~[drekd ~e. •
spent pari o IS c I . ~o .Ill&lt; 1
camps m Arkansas and Califo~ .. :
The parents of Los Angeles Supen-.\
o~ ~oun Judge ~oe Ito,, now pre~ i
s1dinJ ov~
Sunpso~ ~ ~blei' !
mur er. tna • were sen o ear .,,
Moumam.
·;
,•

?J.

Not ACreature .,

'·

Was Stirring...

'

'

! I

\

Everyone agrees.
we can't open our , '
presents 'til we wish
you a very happy· , ,
holiday season! ' ,•

.i''
'

'

Pet
Store
R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

399 w. Mala

Po•ror, O~lo

992•2164

The Store With • All Klnda of Stull" for Pete, St.blea,
Uorll" &amp; Small Anlmalo, l.awna &amp; Gardena

WE'
R
E
HAPPY
TO
DDJVER
.BEST WISHFS.AND HEARTFEII
THANKS 10 EVERIDNE

.·'
•!

.. ...

Being a part of this wonderful ~unity is truly a blessing.
We hope you aU have a Christmas to be remembered with joy.

Pbtential petit jurors chosen for common pleas term ·
· The following were selected M
pOtend81 pe!lt jurors for the January tetm of the Meigs County
CowtofCommon Pleas: .
· Sullllli Etimbeth Houchins, Middlepon; Kimberly Diane Sparks,
Albany; Virginia Eloise Rees,
R,ilcine·' . Barbara Ann Pierce,
L!mgs\'llle; Susan I. Gregory,
Reedsville; Adaline P. Summers,
PortlanlJ; David Gene Dodson Jr.,
Middl~port; Janice M. Curry,
!Tmqei'\ly; Randy Jay Smith,
Pomeioy; James Anthony Pellegrino, Polnaoy; Paul A. Musser, Rutland; Roben Sidney Marcinko,
TUppers Plains; Tim Matthew
Herdman, Pomeroy; Linda Gail
\fyant, Albany; Jason B. Ridenour,
PomefOYi... Chad Allen Cook,
~meroy; '.tJoise F. Eblin, MiddleP,&gt;rt; ~U E. Smith, Middleport;
Jo Ann Ferguson, Middleport;
Jluoes Robert Grueser, Middleport;
9amuall Bennett. Rutland; Wallb M. Morris, Racine; Rulb Ann
loog, Pomeroy; Frances Joannee
unnel, Pomeroy; Roben K. Hoe• Pomeroy;
.

Maida N. Long, Pomeroy; Mar· Smith, Racine; Jack B. Peterson,
garet Slay, Middleport; William R. Ruiland; Kenneth Edward McClelDyer, Middleport; Faith A!ln lan, Middleport; Charles Leon
Roach, Racine; lvor Nolan Farrar, Collins, ReedSVIUe; Kalberyn EUzPomeroy; Kenneth K. Snyder, Mid- abeth Thomas, ¥iddlepon; April
dleport; Homer Olc;n Baxter, G. Priddy, Pomeroy; Charles Lee
Pomeroy; Robin L. Burnem, Kitchen, Middleport; Eva F.
Racine; Tioa Annette Lambert, Teaford, Racine; Clarinda S.
Pomeroy; Jld Stivers, Middleport; Theiss, Racine; Ishmael I. Smilb,
Wilma H. Casto, Por1land; Deborah Vinton; Pamela Sue Barley,
A. Karns, Pomeroy; Deborah K. Albany; Diana K. Carman,
Davis, Pomeroy; Clarence Wilson Langsville; Lester William HoweU.
Henderson, Coolville; Carl H. Wil- Albany; Ernest Clifford Bing,
son Jr., Racine; Rachel A,. Wilson, Racine; Pauline M. Cunningham,
Middlepon; Peggy Sue Clark, Mid- Pomeroy; Emory L. O'Bryant,
dleport; John R. Hoffman, Pomeroy; Kristy Lynn Ritchie,
Pomeroy; Ruetta Kay Crow, Syra- Racine; Connie Hope Ruc;ker,
cuse; lrene Parker, Syracuse; Ivan Long Bottom; Yvonne S. Young,
I. Chevalier, Reedsville; Connie · Pomeroy;
Sue Bales, Rutland; Thomas A. &lt; Elaine S. Harris, Middleport;
Blaine, Middleport; Robert Daniel Dale R. Proffitt, Racine; Vivian
Davis. Pomeroy; Bobbie E. Roy, Dagmar Singleton, Coolville;
Racine;
Sbirley E. Derenbcrger, Albany;
Wanda S. Rutter, Pomeroy; John W. Perry, Pomeroy; George
Charles Edward Michael Jr., 0. Grate, Rutland; Bonnie Sue
Racine; Glenda S. Lcfell'e, Athens; Bonecutter, Portland; Larry R. LauPhyllis Mae Joachim, Middleport; dcrmilt Jr., Racine; Mary Alice
Warren J. Stearns, Rutland; Randy Bise, Reedsville; Billy Ray
Mark Boston, Reedsv~te; _Hanison

·Quality Print Sho.p .
Middleport

One GooJ.Neighbor
Makes It All

~y JOHN FLFSHER

milled. The cause of the disaster is
still debated in maritime circles.
: :TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. - .
Mrs. Rozman and her ,SUpporters
RliiiSOIII "!Uy" CUildy's life was accuse Sh11mon, !I businessman
shattered in 1974 wbeo one of bis who bas researched .the Fillgerald
t~o daughters was murdered.
for more than a decade, of exploit'l!wenty months later, Coody was ing the tragedy for money. He preainong the mariners wbo perisbed sents video lectures m tbe Fitzgerwben tbe legendary cargo ship aid and is writing a book for publiBdmund Fitzgerald sank in Lake cation next year, the wreck's 20th
~or.
anniversary.
' "My dad suffered terribly the
Especially galling to critics Is
last year and a half of his life," what they consider Shannon's
says Cheryl Rozman, Cundy's sur- sideshow handling of lbe body disviving daugbtCl. "When the boat covery. He announced it to the
went down, lbe only comfort I bad media and has described the
was thinking he was finally at remains in lectures and in a prelimpilace.
inary report of his expedition's
· "But now, I don't know that findings.
·
any more."
,
. "He's te8ring open a lot of old
: Mrs. Rozman, 47, of Gwinn, wounds," said Ruth Hudson of
and several other relatives of lost North Olmsted, Ohio. Her son, 22Firzgerald crewmen are pushing to year-old Bruce Hudson, was a
have the shipwreck declared off- Fitzgerald deck band.
J~ts to future exploration.
"These things be· s putting in
The campaign is aimed primari- the paper ... stuff about the body
IY. at Frederick J. Sbannon, who led being partially mummified, the
'
to tbe Fitzgerald in skull being preserved, we just don't
,team. the ftflb to dive to need to bear that. He's desecrated
.....-__ ..... oc photograph it from the the. gravesite and cheapened their
the flfSl to spot human memory."
the site. The body was
Shannon, who canceled plans
sbip, according to Shan- for another dive to the wreck in
although most of the 29 aew- December because of bad weather,
are tbouptto be inside.
. says bis activities have beeo proper
Fitzgerald, a 729-foo,t ore and in keeping with sound underr.n; .... plunged to the' bolll!m of water an:baeology.
icy lake during a monstrous
He says his critics ignore the
Nov. 10, 1975 - apparently selisilivity be bas shown - particSij suddenly that no SOS was trans-

Alndated Press Writer

ularly his refusal to display video
footage of the remains, despite
lucrative offers from tabloid television.
"We certainly bad no desire to
offend the families and I regret tbal
SOOie of them have been burt, but I
have no regrets about our handling
of tbe situation,'' Shannon said.
"This shipwreck Is of great significance, historically and scientifically, and I think the public bas a
right to the information we've
gathered."
Shannon contends only a small
minority of the Fitzgerald crew's
kin feel as strongly as Mrs. Roz·
man and Mr~. Hudson, although
Canadian officials say they' ve been
flooded with calls from relatives of
the sailm.
The ship bas long been believed
to lie in Canadian waters, 17 miles
northwest of Whitefish Point,
Mich. Shannon says his investiga. lion suggests part of the wn:ck site
might be on the U.S. side of the
border.
Mrs. Rollllan says sbe is trying
to contact other relatives to build
suppon for malcing the wreck site a
no-diving zone, and for building a
Fitzgerald memorial at Whitefish

Such dives io Canadian territory
are regulated by tbe ·Ontario
provincial government's Ministry
of Cuhure, Tourism and Recreation; which issued Shannon's permit.
But there's apparently no law
that would block access to the
Fitzgerald for purely recreational
dives, said Bernice Field of the
ministry's Archaeology License
Office.
"At the moment, anybody can
dive anywhere they want for pleasure," Field said.

The Fitzgerald furor bas caused
Canadian officials to consider
tougher laws on diving to shipwrecks where humans are
entombed, Raymond Chretien,
Canadian ambassador to the United
Point.
States, said in a Dec, 5 letter to
But it's unclear whether Canadi-. Mrs. Rom1an.

We wish you all a great American Christmas.
Thanks tor the opportunity to be of service.

Meigs County Commis.s ioner
t·r,.!lll Hoffman and wife, Pauline

'

BAUM LUMBER

.J

~

CHESTER

...,.~~··11!'!$~-.~~---.,.

--,;1

......,....~----·11!.!1'.

• I

, ours. Season's
Greetings.

MERRY

cH.&amp;~.&amp;Jo.L_,L__,U..&amp;.L.&amp;t.J_,,

Hati)£.1Y caroling, warm
frl••ntiA_ ri'Jany Cheer-filled ·

· seaiOn fulfills
your
· dreams. To all our
friends and netghbora,

TO ALL
OUR .F RIENDS!

__ · "ltl&amp;nk Y()M"·

SUMMERFIELD'S
IISTAURAIII ·· ·

From the Emploree8 ot

985·3857

LilJT.SPJ"LP,

CHESTER, OHIO
'
107 MQ.l
ST.

I

MIDDLEPORT

858 3niAve.

,
I

{

~

~
·

·SEASON'S GREETINGS

®ttefutgs

•JIM" .

an law aUows the restrictions Mrs.
Rozman seeks .
All Fitzgerald dives so far have
been done by governments or
established private groups. Their
missions have been searching for
the cause of the wreck and gathering material for exhibitions. lectures and publications.

THE DAILY SENTINEL''·

'

Thank you for being

Plains; Margaret C. Sheets,
Pomeroy; Margaret L. He~.
Middleport; Charles L. Harris Sr.,
Reedsville; William, E. Arnold,
Pomeroy; Mike Amos, Racine; Jeffrey E. Basham, Coolville; Kathy
A. Watson. Coolville; Erika H.
Boring, Reedsville; Hazel L. Bf!D·
bill, Tuppers Plains; Robat Alkire,
Pomeroy; Lester F. McKenzie,
Racine; Kelly Michael Marcinko,
Pomeroy; Karen Ann Hysell,
Pomeroy; Daniel Mark Dodson,
Pomeroy; Ann Marie Buckley,
Reedsville; Hilda B. Snyder,
Reedsville; Jamie Kathryn BranDOD, Reedsville; Edwarf J. W«ry,
Chester.

We're all fixed up and ready to wish you a
wonderful holiday. Thanks a lot.

Bernetta Ward
Keith Oiler
Mary Parker
Kevin Hoffman
Sheila Westfall .
Debra McKnight
Jerry Jacks
Bernice Durst
Shirley Coleman
Brian Randolph. '
Nicholas Michael

Worthwhile~

Wyant, Albany; Willis Henry
Durst, Pomeroy; Diana Sue Karr,
Pomeroy; Cathy Lou Casto,
Pomeroy; Denzil L. Proctor, Middlepon; Brian David Cur, Albany;
Clyde Ronald Quillen, Racine;
Lenore Sibley Slack, Middleport;
Richard Dan Spencer, Coolville;
Charlotte Louise Newell, Middleport; Jill Elaine Chichester,
Reedsville;
William W. Whitlock, Syracuse;
Lillian Gail zerkle., Middlepon;
William Earl Cray, Dexter;
Stephanie Jayne Thomas. Middleport; Ruie V. Manley, Reedsville;
Jack Preston Stanley, Pomeroy;
Edward L. Murphy~ Tuppers

.

FROM THE
DAILY'SENTINEL AND
YOUR CARRIERS
Hope your holiday Is a real delight.

O'Brien, Shade; Francis P. Broderick, Pomeroy; Jilpmy B. McClure,
Pomeroy; Penny Lynn Gillispie,
Long- Bottom; Mildred Virginia
Laudermilt, Dexter; Edna Maxine
Rose, Racine; David D. Price,
Pomeroy; Johnny R. Krider, Portland; Willis F. Bearbs, Racine;
James H. Quivey, Pomeroy; Damll ·
L. H~. Middleport; Wanda
Laudermilt, Racine; Maria Ann
Graham, Pomeroy; John J. Kemmer, Rutland; Billy Wayne West,
Reedsville; Jonetta M. Davis,
Racine;
Theodore P, Hayes, Dexter;
Dawn Marie Erwin,. Albany; Ronnie Allan Spaun, Pomeroy; Susan
Louise Blackford, Pomeroy;
Gilbert M. Zwilling, Pomeroy;
James B. Phillips, Albany; Beulah
Cline, Reedsville; Julia M. Hysell,
Syracuse; Joseph A. Snyder,
Pomeroy; Juanita Belle Wamsley,
Middleport; Jo Ellen Roush, Syracuse; Sandra S. Wrigb~ Coolville;
Mary V. Lee, Pomeroy; Elsie Irene
Dodderer, Coolville; Marty Gene

Families,
researcher clash over diving
.

I

~liba~

.:

The Dally Sentinel Page .. 21

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

~· ~

_ _ _, _

POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION
Anderson's
Bank One
Banks Construction
Brogan Warner Insurance
Buttons and Bows
. Chapman Shoes
City Loan
.
Clark's Jewelry
Court Street Grill
Crow &amp; Crow, Attorneys
Crow's Steak House
Dairy Valley
,
Dav1s-Quickel Insurance
Downing &amp; Childs Insurance
Fabric Shop
Farmers Bank
Fraternal Order of Eagles
Fultz &amp; Warner, Attorneys
K&amp;C Jewelers
Ken's Appliances
Kenneth Utt, CPA

�:Page 22-Tlll Dally Semlnel

Friday, December 23, 1994

Ohio

!

Report links pain re·never-~~-:
overuse with kidney · fail~rttulose

• !
I

.•

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
About 50,000 new cases of kid- lbeir pill-raking bislllrieS will!
AP Science Writer
·
ney failure are diagnosed in tbe of 361 heallby people.
·
BOSTON- Persuading people United States annually, and about
Among lbc fmdings: ·. ·;
to avoid overusing Ty1~nol and 190,000 people are being ueated . • Tbe risk of kidney , flli~ure
other brands of acetamtnopben for lbc condttion. The new report mcreased about ~percent \IIPK&gt;se
could reduce lbc cases of kidney estimates that about 10 percent of who took acetammopben between
.failure in Ibis coun111 by-1{) perceol--coses-= 5;000 a year - arc caused--twice a week-and-once-a day for at and cut medical bills by $700 mil· by acetamioophen.
least a year, compared wid! !bose ·
lion a year, a study today conLast year, acetaminophen wbo used the drug less often.
eludes.
accounted for 48 percent of. the
• The rislc was double in people
Tbc study, publisbed in !be New nation •s $2.9 billion over-the - wbo used lbe pain reliever an aver·
England Jour~a/ of Mtdi~ine, is counter pain reliever sales, acoord- age of once or more a day for at
the second thts week to ltok lbe ing to Kline &amp; Co., a consulting least a year.
llOJ!ular J?llln medicine witb rare but firm. Tylenol made up about 70
• Aspirin does not j!ppear to
senous stde effects.
percent of acetaminophen sales.
barm the kidneys.
The study fo.und that people
Tbe latest study was based on a
' At)east two odler studies in !be
wbo average a ptll a day over the survey of 716 people on kidney past five years have suggested a ,
course of a year face double !be dialysis. Interviewers compared link between acetaminophen and
usual risk of kidney failure, a dev·
kidney disease.
astatiog condition !bat requires fre·
·
quent dialysis tteatmenl
Another repon in lbc Journal of
May your holidays be ··
lbc American Medical Association
blessed with love and
concluded !bat in rare instances
moderate overdoses can cause
lasting joy.... May your ·
severe liver damage if taken on an
New Year be filled with .·
empty stomach.
Experts say raking Tylenol and
hope and lasting pea'ce
similar drugs occasionally for
headaches and olber ills is Safe. But
/he'l'l'f
htlstmM
!bey caution !bat lbc repqrts under·
From
.
score lbc need to take medicines even over the counter drugs Wil and Blake Crow · ·.
only when necessary.
and the staff of'
"We are really talking about
care and caution, not just popping
pills at the slightest ache and
pain," said Dr. Paul K. Whelton of
Johns Hopkins School of Public
Heallb, senior aulbm- of the kidney
report.
.
Cathy, Lorena ' ·•
Johnson &amp; Johnson, the parent
of Tylenol maker McNeil Con·
Christy and Terri ', .~.
sumet Products Co., defended its
product and attacked !be study.
"We are very concerned Ibis
report will unnecessarily alarm the
public, scaring poople into switching from acetaminophen to odler
pain relievers that carry greater
risks wid! everyday use." !be com·
pany said.

e

GRAZING SCULFI'URES - Sclllpted metal

" elk decorated for

Claria~ ~eem

to look up

'

~For this youth,
~on 34th Street'

from 1nzlng on the lawn of Bozeman, MonL,
bank. (AP)

Smith and1'
Associates
Accounting · .·

it's a 'Miracle
come to life

1ly RICIIAllD PYLE

filst visit to New York, bis mother,
Kalby Russo, said on the eve of the
" NEW YORK- An 11-ycar-old operation. "He· s been bouncing
~from North Pole, Alaska, needs a off !be walls."
me-savins operation. A church
Tbc boy lives part time with his
J:aises money, bia dlvoo:ed parents molber in Fairbanks and part time
,put aside their differences to see with bis fadler, James McMahan,
him through the ordeal, and just in lbc nearby suburb of Norlb Pole.
:before Cbrlstmas, lbc lad comes to
"Over 10 years, 75 doctors told
New Yode for sightseeing followed us dlere was no hope - lbat the
by brain 111m0r s..gery at a hospital best we could hope for was that he
on 34th Street.
would be a vegetable,'' Russo said.
:. You saw !be movie, you say? . "I said, 'Hello- lbat' s my son
; Nope. That wasn't Macaulay you're talking about." '
Culldn gee-whizzing at lbc top of
Epstein said lbc condition was
the Empire State Btdlding. It was rare in children of his age. Without
Chris McMahan, II, wbo really an operation, Chris would have
does Uve in Alaska, and wbo really been paralyzed and died within a
i:ame to Gotham wilb bis parents to few months, Epstein said. He
imdergo a life-and-death opel'!llion. already bad been seriously weak·
• Chris underwent several hours ened in bis arms and legs.
of smgery today at NYU Medical
Tbe smgeon bad warned that
~ enter, and bis surgeon, Fred there was a a IS to 20 percent
Epstein, said afterward that it chance Chris would be severely
"went well- so far, so good.'' He injured by lbe sitrgery.
bas suffered since birth from !be
Whil~ the operation wound up
twnor, known medically as neuro- wid! no such problem, the doctor
fibromatosis. or " elephant mao's said it would still take lime to be
disease "
sure the operation was a success.
• The dramatic circumstances_ "We'll know wbeit he gets bact to
notwithstanding, Chris is just a · Alaska," be said. "You have to
~·very normal boy," excited by bis tate it a little bit at a tin(e."

;Aaoclaled P.- Writer

Before tbe operation, .tbris
made a grand holiday tour of Manhattan, delighting in lbe Chrisbnas
tree at Rockefeller Center, !be toy
displays at FAO Schwarz, and !be
Plaza Hotel, which be knew as !be
place where "Home Alone II" was
filmed.

\ ~ ... ~t.
'' '

L'

g{ ~arm ehristmas ~h
We hope your family celebrates with
good cheer and good jrieru.ls.

TluJ:nks for visitng us aU year long!

Ohio

.Transportation_chief pushes for air safety
'

'

'

WASI:DNGTON (AP) -:- Trans- semi-independent corporation
portation Secretary Federico Pena ~use it will be free of governis summoning airline indl$)' lead- ment regulations lbat restrict hiring
ers to Washington to address flying and .ruing and slow lbc purchase of
safety even as be plans tO have a needed new technology. The Tensemiprivate corporation take over nessee Valley Authority and the
alr ttafftc oontrol.
Postal Service are examples of
Deadly commercial alr crashes such corporations.
Ibis year have lbc public coocemed
Pena wants to cut tbe Transabout the safety of !be skies. So, as portation Department payroll to
Pena prepares to fly to New Mexi- abol!t half lbe current level of more
.,. c:ofOnbelloliilays, lie is making tlmf100;000, ani! expects tllat
arrangements for a safety confer- retirements and buyouts will Uim
ence next monlb.
the depanment sufficiently. He also
"I am calling in all the chief hopes to tum more decision-makoperating officers and other execu· ing power over to states and localilives of !be airlines and their chief ties.
pilots," Pena said.Tuesday in a
On odler issues, Pena said:
wide-ranging interview.
• A melbod bas been found to
Pena insisted !bat American avi· fix problems wid! tbe ATR regionation still meets lbc highest safety al airlin·ers, which have been
standards and that statistics sbow banned from flying in icy weadler.
commercial planes remain tbe However, be said be was unsure
safest way to uavel, despite !be
highly publicized crashes.
Even so, he said he is ''ttoubled
by the recent accidents."
"We are going to have a faceto-face discussion about bow we
can do a better job," Pena said,
A DOG'S CHRISTMAS - Santa Paws wu on haDCI at the
tenDing the January meeting "sort
W.De;Jiy Veterinarian Medical Center in Sunrise, Calif., to pou
ofa
gut check."
with pets 8tlcl chUdren rec:ently. (AP)
·
,
I
.
It will be a chance td ask "is
there something ·that we are not
doing,lbaf we have taken fm- grant.
ed, !bat we bave overlooked? Is
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (AP)- Vici final plea Tuesday. '''fbe ideal dlere something else we ought to
and Stephen Diebl would prefer a solution would be to tum !be vol- be doing," Pena said.
Safety will be enhanced, be said,
·. silll!lt night 10 "Silent Night."
ume down. They could play diem
· by sbifung air traffic control to a
The Diebls complain that a · all day then."
· cbwch500feetfromdleirhomc . . . .~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..
· bas been mating too much of a
joyful noise this holiday season,
blaring Christmas carols daily from
louclsJieakcrs on its steeple.
On Tuesday. a state appellate
court judge ordered lbc Congregational Cburcb of Antwerp to cut
back.
"Tbc sad lbing is, I like listening to Christmas carols," said Mrs.
Diehl" wbo told the judge !bat she
.bas to tate medication to stay calm
while lbe music is playing. "But I
don't like being foo:ed to listen to
anydling for hours on end.''
· The couple, wildlife pbotogra. phers wbo do much of lbcir work at
dleir IKme, said !be music disrupted lbcir work scbcdules. They complained to state police on Dec. 11
after eight boon of music.

bow quickly lbe correctiona could
be made.
• For lbc ftrst time in four years,
it appears that !be aviation lndusuy
overall will show a profit "in 1994.
Shipbuilding orders are expected to
increase next year.
• The Federal Aviation Administration is in the process of hiring
300 more safety inspectors.
_ ~ Amtrak subsidies are expected
to continue, at least for the next
five years.
Pena said swilebing air traffic
conttol to a COipolation would get
40,000 people off Uncle Sam's
payroll and save taxpayers money.
Federal rules mate it bard to
shift controllers into busy, bigbsttess airports wbere lbcy are most
needed and can delay !be pun:base
of complex new equipmenl for a
decade, ·Pena complained. Undrz a

corporate operation, Ions-term
rinaDcins could be obtained on
wau Street to purdlale new equipment, be said.
"So, at lbe end of lbc day IbiS
system will be ·safer ... we'll bave
advanced technology and be able to
buy it on a timely basis," Pena
said. •
At the same time, be added,
"We'll have a better wodc environment:-We'u-me-berlerpeqlle-wbo
will be compensated as lbcy should
be in bigb-sttess situatioDI. We' ll
have new technology. And we'll
not have the kind of frusttated
managers who today have to use
their own money to pJint their
offices and ... go to yafd sales to
buy office supplies."
As a semigovernment corporation, the air ttaffic control system
would still be legally immune from
slril!:es.

·Too much of a joyful noise
'

Gr

Is Where The Heart Is...
And ours is with our many kind neighbors
who have made us feel so welcome. We're
proud to be a part of this tine community.
Happy Holidays and thanks!

JR

JE
JE
1r

s

Ordinances in Antwerp, about
1
90 miles north of Syracuse, prohib; it loud noise between I 0 p.m. and 8
a.m., so !be viUage board condud·
, ed the music did not violate the
r law.
: But Judge John F. Lawton limit·
~c:d lbc church to b~ting two _
~bne-bow sessions each day, sepa·
frated by at least four hours ,
:· between 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. until
Jan. 1, said !be Dlebls' attorney,
. Robert J. Mile.tsl!:y. The judge
· allowed two two-hour sessions on
. Christmas Day.
."I'm not totally happy," Mrs.
Diehl said outside tbe judge's
chambers, where the Diehls made a

§

-------

][

0

Nt

-·-+-·-~---~.

In Ibis celebration witbouJ stop, we'd ltlle to start...
~ylng thanks for all your ~s and support.
MelT)' Christmas
From the Folks at

IUTlAID FUIIITURE
&amp; IOnLE GAS

N
Gr

/

/

/

FAMILY HOMES INC.
Model Home Located at
lnterstc:tion of Rts. 7 &amp; 33
Pomeroy, OH 614-991-1478

s

Rutland, Oh 742·22111·800-837-8217

OFFICE SERVICE &amp;SUPPLY

UST WHAT THE
DOCTOR ORDERED

112 WEST MAIN STREET

Here's our
prescriptioofor
tbe holidays...

POMEROY, OHIO 45769

Take~ an e:dra

d6se, of bealtb and
good fortune and
enjoy fbe SBtiSOnf

'

786 No~th Second Ave .

HAVE A BEAUTIFUL DAY. •.

.

.

Middleport, OH

We trimmed the tree, put the gifts beneath,
'

'

Placed all the holly and hung the wreath.
But before we settle io a warm winter~ nap,
To 'await "the man" in the red and white cap,

.1

JOY
HARMONY

There~

one more thing we want to do,

And that!. to extend our greeting to you

E· R
R y -Jf c

Here's hoping your season is
noteworthy! Thank you for
your continued support.

2

T

R
M

s

I
A .

From start to finish in every way.

May your Christmas carol repeat the sounding joy.

... ~

H

A wish that your Christmas is a beautiful day,

s

3
4

MEQ.RY CHRISTMAS.
·-

Because Christmas is nearly here,
Children's voices ringing with ciJeer,
The gifts all wrapped under the tree,

DON'T MISS OU'R BIG. .
s
--·~--~-~Y2-;RICE-SALl·
·
.
\
:~
·.'6
HOSPITAL

We're sending you joy and laughter,
For now and forever after!

-115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy
992·2104 .

VAUEY LuMBER-

·MoNoAv, DEC. 26, 19M, s·A~M. s

Open Monday 8 a.m••-l ·-9 p.m
..
••.

A N D
A - L --L

•
Western Autoe

SUJISHER LOHSE
lAMES L SCHMOll, O.D• .
Doctor of Optometry

-·•· Ullli•utarr•itiiiiJit'Mr•r...-Mml
.
'

EJII .L &amp; DEBBIE HAPTONSTALL
7&amp;d North Second -

P.hone: 992·5515

·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO 45760
1

443 Gtlleral ..........
P'arkwep

,,

MDIIPOIT, 011.

Ph armacy
I

I

•

1

•

555 Park St.

I

992-6111

Middleport

•

•••

••

·-.

•

,,

....•

"

l
.

-

�-·

Pege-24-The Deily Sentinel

•Four soup lovers,
~·=b~rley helps make
r,.f or a tasty broth

'Chicago Hope'
looks for new life
i·n new time slot
By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES - Lawyer-turned-television prOducer David E Kel..-~~- ley doesn't seem tbeJarcenouuype.- ·
Tbose guileless brown eyes, that quiet demeanor. But bis Picket
Fences nabbed tbe best drama Emm~ this year as the lawmen of NYPD
Blue,lhe supposed front-runner,looked on.
Now Kelley' s newest creation for CBS, Chicago Hope, is flicbing tbe
valued 10 p.m. ET Monday spot from longtime incumbent Nonhern
Exposure, which moves to Hope's 10 p.m. ET Wednesday slot Jan. 2.
CBS is trying to build momentum before the switch by airing four
nighiS of Hope reruns Dec. 26-30.
"I'm sure they (Northern Exposure's producers) are not tbrilled about
i~ and I would be just as annoyed if it bappeued 10 one of my shows,"
says Kelley.
He recognizes that Chicago Hope is getting a chance to collect the dividends of a loyal Monday night andience built over four years by Northem Exposure.
Altbough not the consistent Top 20 series it once was Nonhem Exposure still perfonns weU for CBS. And with star Rob M~ leaving tbe
series in Februaliy, the move comes at a difficult lime.
Kelley' s sympathy, however, slOps shy of selflessness. "Though I certllinly could aPJnC~ate tbeir disappointment, I didn't decline the spot," be
says with a rueful grin.
·
This is tbe medical drama's second move. It premiered Ibis fall at 9
p.m. ET Wednesday in competition with NBC's emergency room drama
ER, but quickly found itself tbe No. 2 bealtb care choice.
Chicago Hope offers Kelley's brand of well-crafted drama and moral
and social conllicts. It boasts talented actors Mandy Patinkin and Adam
Arkin as Intense, lOp-gun sur$eons battling intriguing personal demons.
There are the occasional light touches, sucb as banky-panky.in a MRJ
exam machine. But the quilty bumor that marks Picket Fences - and
wbich was part of the late, great hospital sbow St. Elsewhere - is by
design absent from Hope, Kelley says.
. So viewers came, they sampled, and tbey ·picked ER. The fast-paced, ·
fresh-faced NBC series got the big audiences, the magazine covers and
front seat on tbe bandwagon. ·
.
"We weren't happy about being up against a medical sbow because
we thought we'd split eacb other's sbare of the pie," Kelley said. He
pauses, Janghs. ' 'They got all tbe pie.' ·
Chicago Hope went iniO tbe TV Ratings Protection Program at 10 p.m.
Wednesday as CBS weighed its options.
Tbe network bas proven a willingness 10 stick by Kelley before, keeping Picket fences on tbe air as viewers slowly wanned to tbe offbeat
drama set in a fictional Wisconsin rown.
· The series went on 10 win best drama Emmys two years in a row, and
is earning respec:table ratings wilh at-times fe.arless plots about racism,
civil liberties and religion.
~·
Can the same !Iappen for Chicago Hope in its new time slot?
CBS bas nof asked tbat lhe series undergo cosmetic surgery, Kelley
maintalna. No demands that it shift into bigb gear, a Ia ER, or thatlhe
plots be lighteoed up, be says.
. 1bcre bas been an intent fran lhe beginning to add more cast mem- '
bers, and younger acrors - used 10 attract the young viewers coveted by
advertisen - could be among tbem.
Accepting that you're in the entertainment game and lhat ratings count
is part of tbe TV bargain, said Kelley.
"ButiO the extent that you can do more than lhat, you always try to.
And tbat's not to embrace any sense of self-importance tbat we're out to
make lhe world abetter place.
•'But we always consider our best shows to be the ones lhat people talk
about tbe next day ... that raise issues and questions that allow people to
Coofront their own values.·'
' Kelley bas always worked at the top of his, and lelevision' s, game. The
{ormer Bosron lawyer (who is married 10 acttess Michelle Pfeiffer) started
bis TV career as a wriler on LA. Law before creating Picket Fences.
In his cluttered office on the 20th Century Fox lot, awanl plaques and
slatues are casually scatlered on a coffee lable along wilh videotapes and
papers. "We just got !bose this w~~." Kelley explains.
But be bas yet 10 find lhe way to guaranteed success in television.
•'The lruth is we do a sbow and stand up tbere naked with _our fingers
crossed and eyes closed - and bope people like it.''

,.

;;; By NANCY BY AL

}I Food Editor
Bett:er llomel

· For AP Spedal
- .
~: It'~L~p season again and time to remember barley, the grain that
:, helps wc:ken Mltbs and stews.
~
It is also the grain that's dear to the hearts of lhose wbo love beer. Bar:"' ley is used to make malt, a basic ingredient in making beer.
'~ · Barley is an oblong, beige cereal gmin that swells to the size of a com
:.· kernel when cooked. Cooked barley bas a mild, starchy flavor and a slight
·, ,cbewiness. Pearl barley is lhe most popular form used for cooking, but
: barley also comes in several other forms. Store pearl and Scolch barley in
?:' an airtight cootaincr in a cool, dry place for up 10 one year. Keep other
·&lt;forms o( barley for up 10 nine montbs, Stored in an airtight container in a
:•cool, dry plaoc.
t Pear Barley: Has the outer bull removed and bas been polished or
.r··"pearled." Pearl barley adds a nutty flavor 10 soups and casseroles. It is
~~ sold in regW.C and quick-cooking fonns. For 3 cups of cooked barley,
~ cook 3/4 cup of regular pearl barley in 3 cups of boiling water for 45
!&lt;~ minutes or until tender. Or, cook 1 1/4 cups of quick-cooking barley In 2
~·cups of boiling water for 10 10 12 minutes.
ft _ Scotdt or Pot Barley: Less processed than pearl barley. Scotch barley
., ,Is not ljll widely available as pearl barley, but you may find it in health
~~food s~. It is u~ in soups and casseroles, but requires a long period
'&lt; .'Of soaking before USJDg.
~.. BuhY Grits: Cracked, parboiled product that is similar in texture 10
~bulgur. Try barley grits in salads.
?&gt; Barley flakes: Similar to rolled oats but thicker and chewier. Add
t ' barley flakes 10 cookies, breads and homemade granola
Barley Flour: The finely ground gmin. Breads made with barley flour
r!bave a cakelike texture and a slight sweetness.

,

FROM OUR FAMILY TO YOURS .•.

l

if

If.Tart offers
.
.
.
a noveI

I

I

!~;.By Tile Aaodlted Press
· ·: Roasted red pepper and blue
;.~ cheese tart can be served for a boli-

~.-daybruncbmaincourseorasaftrst
:;coursc ~fore dinner. You can also

10 confront it wilh
tb'e
of bis son (Dylan
Wallb) and bis famUy for Thanksgiving wilb Slilly's ex-wife. Now a
_ college tu~~r, ~~ai~ ~
6ltif0\ier
g
uy uiS
fidJcr 11 the age of S. '
• · Nobody's Fool wanders aoecdot!IIIY through tbe wreckage of
Sully's life: encounters with the
courts aiKI police; memories of the
family bouse, wbcre his father beat
bini unmercifuUy; fe11ds with
Willis and whoever .else stands in
bis war,. Sully ~· in~Jnerable
~ uoul be em:ounters b1s young

•

•

•

• ·make miniature 1at1s from tbe same
• .recipe and SCIVC as appetizers.
The recipe. is vcrsalile. Tbe tart
, can be ml,xed m a food processor or
•;by band. You can use a tart pan or
1:a pie plate. And lhe filling is sim! ·ple: routed red bell peppers fiQIII a
! .Jar, .blue cheese, rosemary and
, .lemon peel. Add strips of bam or
!·prosciutto, if desired. The recipe
i·was developed by cookbook autbor
')Jetty Rosbottom.
.
Routed Red Pepper
ad Blue ClteMe Tart
1 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
'l: 1/2 teaspoon salt
1f.Z teaspoon baking powder
112 cup (1 stick) butter, chilled. .
tl ut iniO IIIDIIll pieces
~· I egg yolk
.
.::· 3 tablespoons cold water
For tbe Riling
i' 12-ounce jar roasted red pepiJ!ers•drained, patted dry
t ' 4 ounces blue cheese, crumbllll!
J.« sliced
~ 3 ounces tbinly sliced Jll!lSCUiiiO
J1lr baked bam, cut iniO 11-i- by 2; inch snips, if desired
o:' 1 114 teaspoons fresb rosemary,
~Fbopped, or 112 teaspoon dried

!·
EMPLOYEES (Main Office): Jo Ann Crisp, Dottie Musser, Linda Mayer, Iris Payne,
Ann Browning, Peggy Barton, Darla Zuspan, Robin Burnem, Jeffrey Gilkey, Cherie
Williamson, Carolyn Elam, Edna Ho.. seholder, Melinda Dunn, Vicki Hoffman, Kathy
Pickens, Betsy Hawthorne, Paul Johnson, Mike K.loes, Orval Wiles, f:loward Mullen,
M~ry Shuler, Julia Schultz-Murdock, Tracy Davidson, Judith Flowers, Desiree Taylor,
Machelle Hutton, Shawn Arnott, Brenda Venoy, Sheryl Thoma, Sheila Buchanan,
Frances Hoffman, Jennifer Sayre, Angela McDonald. (Not pictured in order.)

serving plate. Garnish with. rose- .
mary sprigs. Serve wann. Makes g
servings.
Note: To prepare dough by
band in medium bowl combine
Dour: salt and baking pOwder. Cut
in butter with a pastry blender or
two knifes until miXtwe resembles
coarse crumbs. Add egg yolk and
wafer mixing with fork just until
dough bolds rogelher. Shape iniO a
ball; knead a few seconds. Flatten
into a disc and proceed as
directs
·

594-3571

1-800-237-7716

for 2 minutes or until cbips melt,
stirring after each minute.
Stir in flour and vanilla until
well blended. Stir in marsbmallows. Chill 2 boors or until ftrm .
Sbape I teaspoon of chocolate uuxture into balls (re-cbill if mixture
becomes too soft); roll in graham
cracker crumbs. Chill I bour \)r
until ftrm. Srore·covered in refrigerator. Makes about 4 dozen truffles.

MIDDLEPORT
. FLOWER'
SHOP

tf

TUPPERS
PLAINS:
Mary Grover,_
Branch Manager
Jill Dixon
Angie Morris
Lola Sanders
Patricia Hayman

cm

You make it all worthwhile! A very, merry
Christmas lo all.

Christmas In the Country
It's the best place to be, especially with so many wonderful

friends and customers like you!

: rosemary,~
'·~ 1/,2 teaspoon grated

lemon zest
: " Fresh rosemary sprigs, if desired
:~ For crust, place flour, salt and
:J&gt;akjng powder In a food processor
!fitted witb melal blade.
•· Add butter; process, pulsing
~)Dacbine on and off, for several
~ieconds, until mixture resembles
•p&gt;arse crumbs. Add egg yolk and
~~d water; process just until dough
~nrms a ball, several seconds more.
~Po not ovapnx:ess.
I&lt;· f1auen dough into a disc. Place
~ a 9-incb pie plate lined with alulfninum foil or a 9-incb fluted tart
For pie plate, gently press
·,;.f thgh evenly intodebotFtom and 314
'hi!
e way up s1 s. or tart pan,
~cody press dough evenly into botl!Om and up sides . Prick bottom
fork. Cover wilh plastic wrap;
.
gerate 30 minures or overnight
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
!Uncover and bake tart shell 20
inures or until crust is light goldo brown; cool.
For filling, QJt red peppers into
~ 112-incb pieces. Alternately ~
•:mange red peppers and blue 1
.:cbeese on bottom of tart shell. Top
;vilh proscuitiO; sprinkle with rose•91ary and lemon UM, Bake 10 min!utes more or until cheese is melted
•lind bubbly. Cool 10 minutes on
i~ire ract. Remove
. from
. pan onto

(Not pictured in order)

jt:·

~

•

Bnf~TJN

Diane McVey &amp; Starr
21S Weal Union, Albens, Oh.

chips
1/4 cup unsifted flour
1 tables~_XX~n vanilla extract
1 cupuuniatwemarsbmallows
I 314 cups fat-free cinnamon
grab am cracker snacks, coarsely
crushed to 1 cup
'
In !-quart glass measure witb
handle, stir together low-fat sweetened condensed mille and cocoa.
Add chips. Cook in a microwave
oven on bigh (100 percen_t power)

DIRECTORS- FARMERS BANK
Paul E. Kloes, Theron Johnson, Ben H. Ewing, Richard C.
Follrod, Douglas W. Little, Paul G. Elcb, Ferman E. Moore, 1.
Carson Cro\lf, Paul M. Reed.
.
,
OFFICERS
Paul E. Kloes, Chief Executive Officer
Paul M. Reed, President
Jon P. Karschnik, Vice President - Operations
.Roger W. Hysell, VIce President- Cashier
Randall C. Hays, VIce President • Loans
Donna J, Schmoll, Assistant Vke President - Compliance
Edward W. D\lrst, Assistant Vice President
Joanne J- Williams, Assistant Vice President

I

'

Fu

....

.................

992·2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

~

DIRECTORS- Fanners Bancshares, Inc.
Paul E. Kloes
Theron Johnson
Ben H. Ewing
Richard C. Follrod
Theodore T. Reed, III
Paul G. Eich
Fennan E. Moore
Fred W. Crow, Jr.
· Bruce J, Reed

1 · ·

Farmers Bank

~&amp;-savlngs-eomponr

®

£WIL QIIPOIIl\.NTY

LENDER

MEMBER FDIC

............._,_.

-...,.-

..•:

985·3385
STATE ROUTE 1
TUPPERS Pl41NS, 9Hio

......

_.

*

,

Season's Greetings
May your holiday be filled with cheer.

.

&lt;'

Seasons Greetings

ei\Joy Chrlsbnas
In every way.

(

the spirit

Thanks, friends.

-~'

Karr
(Just off Rt.
Syracuse, Ohio

lh.• ,. fa·bric Shop

I ·~

'

II

.

992-6520

.,,,,-tl,lllllll
To All 01 Vot/1
EBER'S GULF

, ·Wishlngyou
the·many
joys of
Christmas.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
POMEROY

949-3099
OHIO .

MARINE SERVICES

. ..,

'
'

t

OD

rry Christmas
To All Of You!

t

Newman is the force lhat makes
it all work. Mter floundering in his
recent career choices, be bas reemerged as a champion. Save a
spot in lhe Acade~r Award lllce.

Diles Hearing
Center

By The Associated Press
These truffles _look el~gant bul
are easy 10 ~e m lhe mtcrowa~e
oven. For vanety, roll truffles m
un~weetened cocoa or confectioners sugar.
Sweet Traditions Trumes
14-ounce ~ low-fat ~weeteued
c'!ndensed ·mdk (not evaporated
mUle.)
2-3rds cup uns~eeleued cocoa
112 cup sem1sweet chocolate

·

l

t·

With fondest wish~ for
health and happiness,
wc1end-our -friends and customers
our sincere thanks.

~...:.:.:&lt;~or toast it ancl serve itror breakfut

~

grandson.
Rare characters abound: Jessica
Tandy (10 whom tbe film is dedicated) as the eccentric widow wbo
is Sully's only friend; Gene Saks as
bis one-legged failure of a lawyer;
Pruitt Taylor Vince as Sully's
loyal, simple-minded co-worker;
Philip Bosco as lhe irascible judge.

SoatJdsOf
The Season!
'

br!:~~~::~!.?s!~~~Twlth ~~~::.k:. '::..r:::~~ ';~

P.appetizer or entree ~, Truffles an easy microwave delight

:Paul Newman offers
:charming portrayal
6
in Nobody's Fool'
By BOB THOMAS
Allocblted Pn8l Writer
When Robert Benton gets il
right, t.brse is no better filmmaker
at cutting through 10 the basics of
the human situation. He proved that
with Kramer vs. Kramu and
Places in the Hean.
With Nobody' s Fool; be again
COOibines dimensiooal characters In
credible situations.
Benton is gifted with a lead
actor wbo can occupy the screen
for most of the running time and
not wear out his welcome. Paul
Newman remains one of the few
stars who can charm an audience
~oro complete sulxnissioo. His long
career bas produced a treasury of
untorsettable roles. Sully Sullivan
of Nobody' s Fool will rank with
the best of them.
Sully might be considered a
full-time loser lly the rownspeople
of New Balh, N.Y ., except tbat
lhey like bim .100 much. His marriage f;liled 30 years ago, be bas a
llum knee from a construction
. injury, be owes plenty and be can
barely pay lhe rent for his room in
the home·of the sympathetic Miss
BCtYI (Jessica Tandy).
He Ia constartdy at odds wilh bis
snmetimc employer (Bruce Willis,
unbilled), whom be tries to sue
over the knee injury. Sully seeks
revenge by stealing Willis' new
snow plow and altempting to do the
his neglected wife

Pomero~lcldleport, Ohio
====~~

�'''
Pa~26-The

Dilly Sentinel

Pomeroy~~leport,

Friday, December 23J,11M

Ohio

wrr~; DICIInber. 23, 1994
.

. . .. - • • .._....f.:;t

Recipes for old-fa.s hioned

cookies, kiss~ay fresh

'

By Tbe Auoclated Preu
Enjoy the ar01118 and old-fasbiooed flavor of freshly l1aked cookles with the following recipe for
ginger spice cookies from Pills·
bury's Healthy Baking cookbook.
This lowcr-calocie version is made
witb wbolc-wbeat flour and half
the fat of re§ular gin~er cooldes.
And if its bugs and lcisses you
want, Marie Simmons' recipe for
chocolate shonbread bars from ber
cookbook, Bar Cookies ro Z, is
the recipe for you.
Ginger Spice Cookies
1 cup sugar
l-3rd cup margarine or butter,
. softened
1/4 cup molasses
I egg
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
l-3rd cup wbole-wbeat flour
2 teaspoons baiting soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon ginger
1/2 teaspoon cloves
3 tablespoons sugar
Heat oven to 350 degrees F. In
large bowl, beat tbe I cup sugar,
margarine, molasses and egg until
light and fluffy.
Add all-purpose flour, wholewheat flour, baiting soda, cinnamon, ginger and cloves; mix well.
Shape dough Into 1-incb balls; dip
half into the 3 tablespoons sugar.
Place sugar side up 2 inches apan
on ungreased coolde sheets. Bake
in a 350-degree F oven for 6 10 8
minutes or until cooldes are set and
begin to crack. Cool 1 minute;
remove from cookie sheets. Makes
4 dozen cookies.
Note: For altitudes above 3,500
feet, decrease sugar in cookie
dough to 3/4 cup. Bake as directed
above.

A

COFFEE MATES - Chocolate· Meringue
Drops and Candled Citrus Peel from "Starbucks

Pasion for Co!ree," pubUsbed by Sunset Boolu,
$14.95 hardcover, In time for holiday treat·mak·

log. (AP)

Nutrition facts per serving: 45
cal., I g pro., 8 g carbo., 1 g fa~ 4
mg cbol., 55 mg sodium, 25 mg
potassium.
Redpe from: Pillsbury Healthy
Balclng: Fre1h Approaches to
Mare than ZOO Farorlte Reclpe1.
VIking. Dec. 6, 1994. $23.95, bardcover.
·
Hugs &amp; Kisses
(Chocolate Sbonbread Bars)
For the shortbread:
1 cup (2 sticp) Wlsalted butter,
softened
1 112 cups unbleached all-pur• pose flour
1 cup sifted confectioners' sugar
1 cup unsweetened cocoa,
preferably European-style
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
For the Icing:
2 112 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
112 cup sifted confectioners'
sugar
About 2 teaspoons milk
1/8 teaspoon almond extract
Line a 9-inch square pan with
foil. Lightly butter and flour the
foil.
To make tbe ~onbread: Combine all of tbe Ingredients In a large
bowl. Beat with an electric mixer
on low speed, scraping tbe sides
and the bottom of tbe bowl. The
mixture will go from dry and
crumbly to dark, moist dough after
about 5 minutes of bea1ing.
Form tbe dough into a disc;
place tbe disc between two sheets
of waxed paper. Roll out Into a 9inch square. Lift off the top piece
of the waxed paper and invert the
square into the prepared pan. Peel
off and discard the second piece of
paper. Press the dough evenly lnio
the comers of the pan and trim any

.

excess from .the edges. Cut tbc
dough evenly mto bars, four~~
and four~· Cov!:l and refrigcrate for 1 bour.
Prebeal oven to 350 de~ F.
Bake lbe sbortbread for S DIIDIIIel.
Reduce tbe beat to 300 degrees F.
Bake for 25 10 30 minutes DIOie, or
until the sbortbreld begins to pull
awar from !be sides of the pan.
Coo m a wile rack for 15 minutes.
Re-cut tbe bars with tbe tir oh
paring knife. Let stand unti .tbur·
ougbly cooled. . .
'
To make the acmg: In a small
bowl, beat to,getber ~ butter and
confectioners sugar watha wooden
spoon. Add the milk as needed to
form a stiff but smooth Icing. Stir
in the almond extracL
.
· To decorate the sbort~read,
transfer the icing IIi a heavy-duty
sandwich bag and squeeze at into
one corner of the bag. Using sdssm, cut a tiny Dip from the C'UDef
of tbe bag. Squeeze out a little of
the icing to judge !be width. You
want tbe icing to make l~rs that
are at least 1/4-lncb wid\1. Cu~
away more If neceasary, If tbe nip
in the bag is IOo large, push the
icing over to the other corner of the
bag and try again.
Using the foil, lift the sbortbread
out of the pan. Separate Into bars
and decorate each serving :ovitb a
large X or a large 0. Mabs 16.
bars.
Recipe from: &amp;r.Coo&amp; A. t~
Z by Marie Simmons. Chapters
Publishing, $12.95.

· "'"" "

1 ••

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy....Uiddleport, Ohio

7

Page 27

Mexican,
Italian
blend
for
new
taste
trend
B~·:l'l.~GY;:Ir~
f
F~Mor •

1
'

.

Better. a -

~...,\Qird_MIIpdne
1

;, FOI'! M".Specbtl Features
. . McJtlcan and Italian foods are
JnSt as popular as they've ever
·beeo,butn~ they're pan of !he
..b~t· cOOtilig trend - blending
: cwsiiiCS: to make totally new taste
, sensalions. Someone even QOined a
!'ICIDlofa~~ trend: fusion food.
.. ·In this steamy microwave dish,
.Itaillo· manicotti does an impres~ slvet ·Imitation of enchiladas,
wrappcd.around a beefy South-ofthe-border filling. Cook the beef
1.filling ·In your microwave oven
ltwb~ tbe manicotti shells simmer
:70D ~e stove. After stuffing tbe
, sbellJ; beat them casserole-style in
, ybutmlcrowave. Expect this dish

to cook twice as fast in your,.
microwave oven as traditional
encbilndas take In your oven.
Mulcan-StyleManlcottl
4 manicotti sbeUs
112 pound lean ground beef
3/4 cup refried beans
114cupsllcedgreenonions
112 teaspoon ground cumin
12-ounce can whole kernel com
with sweet peppers, drained
10 1/2-ounce can enchilada
sauce
1/2 cup dairy sour cream
114 cup sliced green onions
1/4 cup chopped pitted ripe
olives
1/4 cup cbopped tomato
Cook manicotti shells on tbe
range top according to package
directions. Drain.
Meanwhile, in a 1 1/2-quart

microwave-sate casserole crumble
ground beef..Coole, covered, on
100 percent power (bisJ!) for 2 112
to 3 112 minutes or until no pink
remains. Drain off fat.
Stir in refried beans, tbe first
l/4 cup sliced green onions and
cumin. Sp~n m.eat mixture into
cooked manacow shells. Ammge
the stuffed shells in a 2-quart
square microwave-safe baking
dish. Pour com and encbilada sauce
over sbells. Cover witb microwavesafe plastic wrap; tum back one
comer to vent. Cook the stuffed
shells on high for 8 10 10 minutes
or until the mixture is heated
through, giving the dish a baH-tum
once.
Spoon sour cream over casserole. Sprinkle with 114 cup green

onions, ripe olives .and chopped cal., 14 total fat (6 g saL f8t), 73
tomato. Ml*es 4 setvmga.
mg cbo ., 949 mg sodium, 4;1 g
Nutrition facts per aervlng: 361 carbo., 5 g fiber, 19 g pro. Dally

p uml nk•In pie
• ••,,t
• IJ a~n•rco
• t t 0'"Ping
•
I"
wr
I"
L,
t
f
6
""
rf t·Jme
• .
maftes easy rea 10f uesse

.

FROM OUR
FAMILY TO
YOURS

Nuts, upper rilbt, and boxes of Rich Clmcolate
Fudge IMkes delicious gifts of food for the boll·
days. (AP)

'

\

I I

I

.

butterscotch-colored bow. The
By Tbe Allodi'WJ Prea
Pumpkin apricot crumble pie is cernmic pie plate is also given as a
a creamy punpki11 pie lOilPed with gift.
a sweet apricot crumble. "Placed in
Pumpkin Bread
a bandied basket and wrapped in
5 and l-3rd cups all-purpose
netting and bows, tbe package flour
makes an degant hostess gift. .
2 tablespoons bakln~ powder
1 1/4 teaspoons balc:ing soda
For a quick and easy party gift:
4
1/2 teaspoons pumpkin pie
Wrap P'unptln bread In a cbedted
napkin, Tie napldn together with a spice ·
2 1/4 teaspoons salt
pipe cleaner. Add small bells 10 the
ends of tbe pipe cleaner.
5 eggs
Pumpkin Apricot
3 114 cups solid pack pumpkin
Crumble Pie
(29-ounce can)
3/4 cup dried, fmely chopped
2 and 2-3rds cup granulated
apicots
sugar
3/4 cup coarsely chopped walI 112 cups undiluted evaporated
nuts
milk ( 12 fluid-ounce can)
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
1·3rd cup vegelllble oil
1 unbaked 9-lncb pie shell (41 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
cup volume)
2 cups chopped walnuts or
2 eggs, ligbtly beaten
pecans
I 3/4 cups solid pack pumpkin
(16-ounce can)
112 cup granulated sugar
1/4 cup apricot preserves
1 teaspoon gronnd cinnamon
1 teaSJIOO'l ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/4 teaspoon salt
I 1/4 cups undiluted evaporated
milk

According to the NFf...•ieams
that win on opea,ina day ·a more
than twice as likely to reach the
playoffs as lOICI'I.

1

1"1

Combine flour, baldog powder,
baking soda, pumpkin pie spice IIIII
salt In a large bowl.
·
Beat eggs, pumpkin, sugar,
evaporated milk, oil and vanilla In
large mixer bowl until blended.
Add flour mixture; mix just Wltil
moislelled. Stir In lints: Spoon Into
nine greased 5 S/8- by 3 1/4-lncb
miniature loaf pans. Bake in a preheated 3SO-degree F oven for 40 w
45 minutes or until wooden pick
insated In nter comes out clean.
Cool ~
0 minutes. Remove to
wire
to cool completely.
T Wrap: Place bread in a
c
ed 113JlU!. Gather napkin at
tbe top and center with red pipe
cleaner. Tie pipe cleaner In a bow.
Anacb small bells to the ends of
tbe pipe cleaner for decoration.
Makes 9 breads.

.

3 lllblespoons melted butter
Mix apricots, walnuts and
brown sugar in a small bowl. Place
3/4 cup of tbe mixture in tbe bot·
tom of tbe pie shell. Reserve
remaining mixture for topping.
Combine eggs, pumpldo, granulated sugar, apricot preserves, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, salt and
evaporated milk In large bowl; mix
weU. Pour into pie sbeU. Bake in a
preheated 425-degree F oven for 15
minutes. Reduce temperature to
350 degrees F. Bake for 40 to 50
minures or until knife insened near
center comes out clean. Cool on
wire rack.
Add butter to remaining apricot
mixture; stir until m6istened.
Sprinkle over cooled pie. Makes 1
pte..
To Wr.p: Place pie in cel'ijmic
·pie plate and put it in a bandied
basket. The pie is nestled among
natural colored tinsel. The whole
basket is then wrapped In pale but·
terscotcb sheer net. 'Netting is gathered at tbe IDp and tied with a ~ge

An OlJ. . F ashiQned
Christmas Wish
Opportunity's knocking
And we'd just like to say,
Hope your season is perfect
In every way.
May it open the door,
For good tidings and cheer- .
Meny Christmas to all
And a joyous New Year.

OMEGAJV5
Belleville()
Hydroelectric Project

Leon Daggett

DECK
THE

.....

·..:·.; sn~nt
. ~- .Night,
:

values: 32 pcrllCIIt viL A, _
26 Pl!t
cent vit: C, 1 pen:elll Clki-, 80&gt;
percent uoo.

tioly

. Night.

'Tis fue ae.uon to tell
you !.ow mucl.
we appreciate
your support.

:,;, .'May H"IS
.·- ' lovq fill
. your hqarts

Happy Holidays•
Dr. A. Jackson

.~ &lt;Jndhomll

. . . this holiday
i Sll&lt;JSOn.

GOOD TIDINGS

I

, PICKENS
.' H~RDWARE
'.. t' MASoN,
W.VA.
,I

We wish everyone a wonderful holiday season.
And we'd like to take this opportunity to thank all
of you for your valued patronage.

Meigs Carpet &amp; Decorating Center
Rt. 7 Hobson Rd.
Middleport, OH
992-6173

.

Balles
Optometrist
May your holiday season
deliver loads of goo/:/ fortune
and bundles of cheer.
Thanks for your support.

WAGNER
HARDWARE
·A e-,uu eu.. 01 -'i•rA.o4tt"

224 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio
992-3279
228 Upper River

Gallipolis,

446·3300 ·.

Sixth Street
Racine, Ohio 45n 1

. 949-2330

'
·· I

RIVERSIDE
FOOD MART
431 West Main Street
Pomeroy
992-3636
-- Open 24-Hnurs-A. Days
Seven Days A Week

,CITY ICE
AND FUEL
COMPANY
.

JOYOUS
L!

Here's ~oping your holiday is filled

with an af:iundance of 6/essings.
Many thanlcs for bestowing :your
. '' .
·friendship upon us I

I

Route 62 North
Point Pleasant
' 675-1700

JWtglll Btljore
Cb.....,_~~&amp; •• "
.

'

I

MILL STREET BOOKS
93 Mill Street

&lt;

•

992 _6657

Middleport

Down by the SH,

ANI all tiN gtfts ~ ~ tmd put '..-IJ the , _,
BMI the rvli of the belli# """ to UJGtt llllltl dlalm,
WbM Sama bad,_, there tdrwldy flNI tbM ,....
Here 's bot&gt;Utlf dNu )'0" ftnJ y&lt;JIIT mo.t IINIIIled k&gt;y,
Alld we serld you ow tbtmlrs flNI we II1ISb )'Otl great jay!

DAIRY
QUEEN
992-3322
700 NOITH

MIDDLEPOn, OliO

�Pomeroy-MI~dleport, Ohio

Page-28-The Daily Sentinel

'

Il

Roasting in an open fire: ches.tnuts ma.in·tain appeal

·,

I

By MARKUS FARBINGER
The Culinary Institute
of America
For AP Special Fe•tures
HYDE PARK, N.Y. -What
does the holiday season in the
Alpine region of Europe have in
CIIIIIJIOII with a winter resort in the
Rockies? Snow, presents, a toasty
fare, baked apples ... and chestnuts.
roasting on an open fare.
Since I'm from a mountainous
area outside of Salzburg, Austria,
my winter ~olidays would not be
complete wtthout tbe chestnut. My
memories are vivid early in the fau,
when apprentices in the ttaditio~
pastry shops would be busy preparing the cbestnut purees and confits
for the wintertime. A few weeks
later, they transformed them into

Cranberry treats
For AP Special Features
Toss a couple of bags of cranberries into your freezer for out-ofseason rooldng. This crimson fruit
dessert is just one way to go
beyond traditional cranberry sauce.
The juice from the pureed berries
gives pears a striking scarlet color
as they poadl.
Scarlet Pears
I 1/2 cups cranbenies
3/4 cup water
6 ripe medium pears
1/2 cup sugar
1-3rd cup amaretto or hazelnut
liqueur
·
I cup whipping cream
2 tablespoons amaretto or hazelnut liqueur (optional)
Toasted sliced or slivered
almonds
Fresh.mint (optional)
In a large saucepan or Dutch
oven combine cranberries and
water; heat to boiling. Reduce heat
and simmer, uncovered, about 5
minutes or until cranberry skins
begin to pop. Cool slightly.
Place the mixture in a food processor bowl or blender container.
Cover and process or blend until
almost smooth. Sieve mixture, if
desired. Return mixture to
saucepan or Dutch oven.
Meanwhile, peel and core pears,
leaving stems intact If necessary,
cut a thin slice from the bottoms of
pears so they stand upright. Add
sugar and the 1-3rd cup amaretto to
cranberry mixture; bring to boiling.
Add pears, turning to coat Simmer,
covered. for 10 to 15 minutes or
until tender. Cool slightly. Serve
warm or chill, covered, until serving time.

the scrumptious creations that were
only made a few montbs each year.
Sweetened chestnut puree with
vanilla and a touch of rum was
shaped into little replicas of chestnuts and dipped in chocolate .
Whole chestnuts were boiled,
cooked seven days in a flavorful
syr~p. and thickened day by day
unttl the chestnuts were tender and
preserved at the same time.
There were truffles witba chestnut filling enrobed in pistachio
marzipan finished with spikes and
some food color to mock the pretty
but inedible horse chestnuts; logshaped cakes .witb lingonberry jam
and chestnut cream; dome- shaped
cakes with heaps of chestnut puree
forced through a press to form
spaghettilike strings on the top. The
last goes on.
To roast chestnuts, cut across
the outer shell on the flat side to
prevent them from exploding in the
oven. Place the chestnuts in a pan
.and roast at 475 degrees F for 20 to
30 minutes. Keep the chestnuts
covered In a cloth in order to keep
them bot so tbey will peel better.
Make sure to remove the inner
fibrous sldn (peHicle).
To boil chestnuts, score and
place in a saucepan and add water
to come one-third up the side of the
nuts. Add a pinch of salt. Cover
and simmer for about 20 to 30 minutes until tender.
In recent years, a product widely
used in Switzerland has come to
the United States: sweetened chestnut puree. It is a ready-to-serve
paste witb excellent flavor and tex-

refrigerator.
Press points of a smaU fort into
the bottom of the chestnut. Dip
chestnut upside down into melted
(tempered) dark chocolate. The
very bottom part, where tbe tips 31'1:
inserted, will not be dipped in
chocolate. Place dipped chestnut
onto parcbmen1 paper; let firm.
Place each heart into small paper
cups and serve with coffee, if
desired.
Chestnut Gugelhupr
(Chestnut Poundcake)
1 cup boiled or roasted chestnuts, peeled and pureed
l/4cup&amp;U-purposeflour
1/4 cup fine ground almonds,
witb sldn
2-3rds cup sugar
7 egg yolks
5 egg whites
4' teaspoons melted butter

2 teaspoons chocolate extract
Zest of 1/2 lemon
Butter and flour a kugelbopf
mold or bundt pan with softened
butter. Preheat oven to 325 degrees
F.

Combine _pureed chestnuts with
flour and almonds until evenly
blended.

ture.

Ch,estnut Hearts
I pound boiled or roasted chestnuts, peeled and pureed
8 ounces white chocolate, melted
I tablespoon dark rum
I 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
4 ounces dark chocolate, melted
and kept warm
Combine tbe chestnuts, melted
white chocolate, rum and vanilla.
Blend well. Wrap the chestnut mixture in plastic, pressing out any air
pockets. Refrigerate until firm.
Roll the cbestnut mixture into a
log. and divide into chestnut-sized
pieces. Shape each piece into a bau
by rolling one piece at a time
between the palm of your hands.
Form each ball into a teardroP,
shape by opening hands into a "v '
and moving back and forth. Place
the teardrop sliape into the curled
palm of oue band and p,ress with
thumb lightly to make a 'fiat" side
of the cbestnut. Let chestnut rest in

Whip the 7 egg yolks with balf
of the sugar until pale and thick.
Whip the 5 egg whites with the
rest of the sugar into a medium stiff
peak meringue.
Fold one-third of the meringue
into the egg yolk mixture. Fold in
the chestnut-flour-almond mixture.
Add the remaining meringue and

NO-FUSS LASAGNA - Invite friends and family to trim the
tree fot the hoUdays. Serve no-fuss lasap as part of a delicious
holiday ballet. (AP)

3 cups wha1e milk
·
4 semisweet baking chocolate
'4
)
squares ' ounces
3/4 cup sugar
1/4cup butter or margarine
8 ounces old-fashioned white
bread, cubed (5 cups cubed)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract

·
3/4 teaspoon ground cmnamon
3 eggs lightly beaten
'
·
Fa~ custard, combme 2 cups of
the mtlk, the chocolate, sugar and
butter in a large microwave-safe
bowl. Cook on higb (100 percent
pow~) for 9 minutes, stlrrfug every
3 minutes, or until chocolate is
melted.

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

t

Like Christmas!

Opportunity's knocking
And we'd just like to say,
Hope your season is perfect
.In every way.
May it open the door,
For good tidings and cheer - Merry Christmas to all
And a joyous New Year.

DOZER &amp; BACKHOE

SERVICE
: Septic Tanka
Leach Beds Installed
S..ments, Foot111'11
Mobile Home set-ups
Land Clearing
Road Building
FrH Eatlmatea
1 (614) 985-4495

169 N 2nd Ave. Middlepon, OH

992-2725

••

PHONE 992. 2196

·.

Happy Holidays!
I

Meigs County Tuberculosis Office
I

· Mulberry HKt•·
' I.

'

·

,

Po~Mroy

Phone 441 1483
303 Upper RIY• Road. Gdlpola, OH
Phone 1112-8426
813 w. Main
Pomeroy; OH

I

'Behold, the Lamb of Goci.'• · I
.

John 1:2~ ·

1

. Mav the llgl:rt of love Ohd Jov shine

. , ,
on you .~nd VO\Ii'ramily ,th~ the year.
·
God bless you,
I '

HoME ENTERTANWNT (ENTER

391 WISt lUIN STilT .
"2•3524

JIOilllnOY, 0110
'\
.

I '

mo.

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

RIGGS
CHRISTMAS TREES

HAULING

Choose and
cut your tree.
(or we'll cut" for you)

Uinestone
&amp;Gravel

Riggs Tree Farm
39507 Rocksprings Rd.
(at comer of US Rt. 33)
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-5702
Carol &amp; David Riggs

Phone 247-2206

W1n2tfn

I 111 !.'1 010 p&lt;.l

4

....o.altleRtltl

Joe N. Sayre

SAYRE TRUCKING
614·742·2138

1112113-4

Plains, where he bad moved with
bis wife and their 12-year-old son
earlier this year. ·
·
Police Commissioner William
Bratton said authorities found "significant evidence'· linking Leary to
Wednesday's firebomb, as well as
to a firebombing last week in
Harlem that injured three teenagers.
"We are comfortable that this is
pan of a scheme to exton money,"
Bratton said. "It appears tltat the
subway system, the Transit Authority, may have been tlte intended
(target)."
Authorities found bomb-making
materials and notes that Leary bad
written to himself detailing his
plans, said a law enforcement
. source who spoke on condition of ·
anonymity.
Rough schematics of the . firebombs and a videotape with a label
suggesting it was about bomb-making also were found. the source
said.
·
One of the notes said, •'This
will keep happening unless I am
paid a ransom,'' the Daily Ntws
reported today. The note started
with the title "Mad Terror
Bomber."
Investigators speculated that
Leary might have planned to time
his bomb- a crude concoction of
two mayonnaise jars, gasoline, 9
·

By ROBERT H. REID
Associated Press Writer
SARAJEVO, Bosnia-Herzegovina - Tbe start of a holiday ceasefire brokered by Jimioy Carter was
delayed today while the United
Nations tried to resolve differences
between the warring sides in the
Bosnian war.
The cease-fire, announced by
the former president on Tuesday.
was to have gone into effect at
noon today.
But U.N. special envoy Yasushi
Akashi told reporters that differences rem!lined. The Bosnian government has demanded information
on missing persons in Serb-held
territory and a linkage between the
truce and further talks on an international peace plan.
Following a meeting with
Bosnian Vice President Ejup Ganic
this morning, Akashi left for Pale, .·
the Bosnian Serb stronghold 12
miles eas~ of Sarajevo. in an
attempt to iron out the differences.
"Since tbe talks are ongoing
now, we might have to postpone
the cease-fare 12 hours, maybe 24
hours," U.N.
Alexan-

·'

4

114-1411-2487

992~215

Giveaway

Forked Run
Sportsmqnrs Club
Muzzle Loading
Gun Shoot Frlctay,
Dec•.6:30
__:...:..:__

'

continued past the noon
"We have made further
progress toward the conclusion of a
cease-fire agreement throughout
Bosnia-Herzeg_ovina," Akashi said
after meeting Ganic this-morning.
His plan to have the warring
parties sign the cease-fire agreement today apparently bad to be
abandoned because of Serb objections to language inserted in the
pact at tbe Bosnian government's
request
On the eve of the planned ceasefire, two shells slammed into a
Sarajevo mll(ketplace, killing two

people and injuring seven others.
U.N. officials did not say who
was to blame for the shelling.
There was more violence Thursday throughout the republic.
Another person was killed and
five more were wounded in
sheUing ofBibac, a town in a UN. declared "safe area" in northwest
Bosnia. Bihac bas been under
attack by Serbs from Bosnia and
Croatia for weeks.
The violence underscored the
difficulty facing any cease-fire in
the 32-month war, and served as a

Tree Trimming and
Removal- Yard Care
Free Estimates
614-992-4447

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Cuetom
Frame Repair
NEW I USSit'P.AATS FOR
All IIAKE,~'t IIO.DEIIS

o,

m:ti'ii
, ·-m-sm' OR

TOLL FREE 1-100·141·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

Darwin, Ohio

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
Remodeling:
Stop 6 Compare

FREE ESTIMATES
9154473

Howard L. Writesel
ROOANG
NEW-REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

.,.....

Used lpplia•c••
for Sale

Amber!
We Love You!

614-992·5515

Call
1~11Mn

BEST RECEPTION

For the best in satellite
sales and ,..rvice contact
Bryan or
Best Reception.
-We have even better
and quicker service.
· Over tO yrs
experience
. Service on all system
types.
. Best prices all around
the area.
992-2903 or 992-6320

PUBLIC NOTICE
Nolice Ia hereby given
that on Saturday, December
24th, 1994 al 10:00 a.m., a
public aate wilt be held at
211 Weal Main Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio, The
Farmers Bank parking tot,
to settlor caoh the following
collateral:
I 993 OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME
SNN
1G3WH14T2PD373301
Tho Farmers Bank and
BINGO
Savlnga
Company,
Pomeroy, Ohio, rosorvas tho
Racine American
right to bid at this sate, and
Legion Post602
to withdrew the above
Now having Bingo
collateral prior to aate.
every Sunday Night
Further, The Farmers Bank
and Savings Company
Starting 6:45pm
Doors open 4:30 pm
reserves the right to reject
any or an btds submitted.
The more people
Further, the above
1 1 th b'
collateral wttt be aold In the
P ay ng e tgger
condition tt ts In with no
the pay-oft.
expressed or tmptted Save ad for 1 free card.
warranties given.
949-2038 or 949-2044

reminder that many. previous
efforts to end the fighting have
For more Inform atlo n '-;,;;.;;;::;;;;:;;;,;;
failed.
contact JeH Gilkey, at 992· r
Despite the avowed readiness of
1
HIN'IIPPLIANCE
both sides in Bosnia for a cease- · ~1 ::'2 1 , 22 , 23 : lTC
'
IEDICE
fare, seemingly irreconcilable dif•Factory Authorized Parts
· ferences remain that could doom
&amp; Service
Public Notice
the truce .
•All Makee -42 Year•
•Fast Reliable Service
Tbe key issue is an international
PROBATE COURT OF
•Weahara • Dryar1 • Ranges
peace plan calling for the Serbs to ,
MEIGS
COUNTY,
OHIO
•n&lt;"frigeratora •Freezers
ac;cept a 49 percent share of
Eotale of He rachel H.
•Oiti!lWIBhera
Bosnia, compared to the 70 percent
Badgley, Deceased
•H.W Healers
they hold. Fifty-one percent would
Case No. 28728,
.,..ic :owavea •Disposals
Docket 13, Page 522
go to the Muslim-led Bosnian gov•Thanka Meigs &amp;
NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
Surrounding Areas
ernrnent and its Croat allies.
OF ADUCIARY
(614) 985-3561 or
Rovtaed Code, Soc. 2113.08
, 992-5335 1211 4/lfo
"On November 28,· 1994,
In the Melga County Probate
Court, Caao No. 28728,
Ralph Badgley, 47796 SR
124, Ractne, OH 45771 wu
appointed Admtnlatrator o1
tho eatoto of Herschel H.
Badgley, deceased, lolt of
Broadway St., Racine, OH

NOW OPEN

l

J&amp;D FLEA

Robert E. Buck,
Probata Judge
(12) 9, 16, 23; 3TC

MARKET

NEW &amp; USED
ITEMS
711 South Third
Middleport
Hours: 1D:OOA.M.
to 4:0D P.M. Dally

WEIER'S .
CHRISYIW

fillS

(ORAND PRIZE WINNER - Carol McKing of Cheshire, left,
wu the grand prize winner or a compact ldlsc player at C &amp; A
Auto's Valvlillne 'Kwlk-Lube grand openiJII. In the photo above,
-.,.ger Jeff BlsseU pnse!Jls the CD player.-

1

.
'

PRECISION AUTOMOTIVE
State Rt. 33

Happy Sweet
16th Birthday

45171."

(No Sunday Calls)

CONSTRUCTION

Far Ill MaJctr

Public Notice

614·992:7643

ROBERT BISSEU

IU'I
IPPLIUCI
IIRIICI

Mom&amp; Dad

• · New Homes • VInyl Siding New
'
Garages
• Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofing .
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL '•
. FREE ESTIMATES

Chuck StoHs
614-99U223
Free Estimates
Insurance Work Welcome

7131111 TFN

-949-2168

volt batteries and an egg timer ,
concealed in a shopping bag - to
go off between Manhattan and
Brooklyn, trapping victims in a
tunnel under the mouth of the East
River.
The arrest did not surprise some
of Leary's former and current
nei$hbors. They described him as
an intense computer nerd who
sometimes overreacted to disputes.
· Leary studied engineering at
Columbia University but did not
earn a degree, the school said. He
worked for CBS from 1972 to 1981
as a software specialist and later for
the now-defunct brokerage firm
Drexel Burnham Lambert, police
said.
He had been out of work for
almost a year since being fired by
Merrill Lynch for "performance
reasons," and had four mortgages
to pay, including one on the
$280,000, 10-room colonial house
with a swimming pool in Scotch
Plains. He also owned three apartmems in a Brooklyn high-rise.
Apparently depressed, he'd
recently lost weight and was taking
Prozac.
"There were times when I questioned his stability," said Marcella
Channis. a former neighbor of
Leary's in Brooklyn . ' ' He was
excitable. He seemed to be a little
on edge."

BISSELL IUILDERSi lffC.

Oee Step Complete Aute B••Y Repelr

FREE ESnMATES

Carter-brokered ceasefire placed
on hold as U.N. eyes differences ·

"'10DLEPO~"T, 0"'

...

One mile out ·
143 from Rt. 7
Tues. - Wed. - Fri. - Sat.
.
1'6
• Craftsman Tools
•Toys
•Guns
Loads of Misc.
Buy·Sell·Trade
992•2060 10/511 mo.

By TOM BAYS
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK - lq the end,
authorities say, Edward Leary's
extortion plot blew up in his face.
Tbe unemployed computer technician hoped to use crude firebombs rigged with egg timers to
create terror in the New York City
subway system and blackmail the
transit agency, police said Thursday.
But the bomb Leary apparently
planned to plant Wednesday on a
cmwd~,4 s.IJbway ~ar accidentally
went pH while be was holding it,
creating a wall of fire and injuring
dozens of passengers.
Leary, 49, :was arrested early
Thursday in his hospital bed on 45
counts of attempted murder. lieremained in critical condition with
burns over 40 percent of his body.
Sixteen other victims of the
blast also remained hospitalized,
including two more in critical condition - a 60-year-old man and a
40-year-old woman.
Police said Leary immediately
became a prime suspect simply by
leaving the scene. He turned up at
another subway station, his face
scorched and his sneakers melted
onto his feet. and asked a police
officer to call him an ambulance.
But a motive didn't emerge until
investigators searched bis borne in
the New Jersey suburb of Scotch

. 9i#d

Phone f7S.s3eo
2Ith StiMl &amp; Jadilon-M.•-Polnl Pleaunl, viY

48750 Mile Hill Ad.

(FREE ESTIMATES)
V.Cf. YOUNG Ill

Rllclne,Oh

DAVE'S
SWAP SHOP

work

attempt blew up in suspect's face

'•

Eojoy the s~itlt and WaJl!lth of,Christmas,
and please accept our profound gratitude
for your support this year.

Temperament

Not yoLo, your home'
Will create a new
look for any room
using your
collectables and
treasures.
Bring new warmth
into your homes for
the Holidays.

5

j
.I

· Middleport
992-5141

·

FACE LIFT!

VOUNG'!t
CARPENTER SERVICE
oRoi:om Addition•
·
oNewGeragaa
oEiec:trlcal &amp; Plumbing
oflooflng
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting a leo concrete

·N..Y. transit officials feel bombing _
12123f1

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON

461 SOUTH THIRD

Quality and

Business Services

Christmas hils come 'round again and we hope you find yourself
surrounded by Ia~ of love and laughter.
Our deepest gratitude to you. our custome/3,
for your year-roond support/

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

~

SpecWzing In Part-colonl
for lhow and companlona.
Stud •rvlce &amp; puppies,
young aclJita tor lale.

witb lbe ones you love. .
Best wishes from all of us.

~t\.. Cou 11 ~

. .

Cocker~~~!~
. .·
Bred lor

A real fun party night. Your
night to sing.
Moose Members &amp;
W.O.T.M.

.It's Beginning
To Look ALot
.Like Christmas!

To·Look ALot

'

Bob Snowden's Lot
s.R. 124
Rutland, Ohio
614·742·3051

992-2269

..
cAMBERWOOD
...• . .,.-

Ready Nov. 23
$10&amp; Up
Open 10 am- 9pm

Bill Slack

Call949-2734

Laser Karaoke
with "Two Bits"

JAY'S EXCAVATING

Llgtit Hauling,
Shrubs Shapped
and Removed
Mia. Jobs.

Maplewood Lake
St. Rt. 124
Racine, OH

Don't miss Friday Night
Top Entertainers from
Columbus, Ohio
9:00 til1 :00 a.m.

CHRISTMAS
TREES &amp;
WREATHS

TREE- TRIMMING
AND REMOVAL

Cundiff's
Custom
Cut

freezes :

Chocolate bread pudding a party favorite
ByFThe Associated Press
.
.
or an e1egant holiday dmner
party, serve chocolate bread pudding topped witb whipped cream
and shaved chocolate Th
. .
eas· to make d tak e .rect~ 18
inJewents • an
es only eaght
·
Chocolate Decadence Bread Pudding

I

Add tbe melted butter, chocolate 1
exttact and lemon zest; fold gently. 1
Pour the batter into the prepared
pan. Bake in a 325-degree F ,pven•j
for 45 minutes or unlit a cake leSter
or wooden skewer inserted nellf lbe '
center of the cake comes out dean.;
Let the cake cool foc 10 to 12 mln-1
. utes after baldng and urunold onto !
cooling rack. Dust with powdered.'
sugar, if desired. This cake
very well. Makes 1 cake, 12 to 14:
.
servmgs.
,'
Note:
Cooked
.
c
hestnuts
can
be
r
orange.
purchased
frozen,
vacuum-p~d
j
Best Ever Spritz
or. packed In brine. WJ!en using !'
2-3rds cup sugar
these products, drain an a sieve,·
I cup butter, softened
rinse, drain again and proceed as 1
I egg
recipe directs.
I
1/2 teaspoon salt
(Markus Farblnger 11 tum ;
2 teaspoons vaniUa
•
2 114 cups all-pwpose flour
leader, baking and pulry arts '
Heat oven to 400 degrees F. In curriculum and lnltrul:tlon, 'lltel
large mixer bowl combine all Culinary lnltltute oUmerkit In·
ingredients except flour. Beat at BydePiri,N.Y.) ,
. {
medium speed, s.craping bowl · To order frozen orpoic steamoften, until mixture is light and peeled chestnuts, write to: ~t-11
fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add flour. Hill Orchards, 3300 Bee ·Cave ·
Belli at low speed, sa-aping bowl Road, Suite 650, Austin, ·1\~as:
often, unlit weU mixed, 2 to 3 min- 78746. Chestnut~ are scild in (i : lfl-~
utes. If desired, add the ingredients and 2 112-pound ~ea. ~ . . ~
from the variations listed below.
If dough is too soft, cover and
refngerature until firm enough to
form cookies, about 30 to 45 minutes. Place dough in a cookie press;
form desired shapes I inch apart on
ungreased rookie sheets. Bake in a
400-degree F oven for 6 to 8 minutes or until edges are lightly
browned. Makes 5 dozen cookies.
Lebkachen Spice Spritz: To
basic dough, add 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 1/2 teaspoon allspice and 1/4 teaspoon
cloves. Glaze: In small bowl stir
together 1 cup powdered sugar 2
tablespilons milk and 1/2 teas~n
vanilla until smooth. Drizzle over
warm cookies.
Mint Kisses: To basic dough
add I /4 teaspoon mint extract.
)Jrunediately after removing cookies from oven, place 1 chocolate
candy kiss on each rookie.
Chocolate Chip Spritz: To
basic dough add 1/4 cup coarsely
Celebrate lbe
grated semisweet chocolate.
Miracle of CbrislmiJs ·

It's Beginning

264 S. 2nd

.•
fold until an even batter forms:;

Filling the gift basket with
homemade cookies, bread
By Tbe Associated Press
The following spritz recipe can
be transformed into many different
cookies, just by varying the ingredients. You can fill baskets and
boxes with these buttery treats. No
time to make cookies? Bake an
orange walnut bread instead. It's a
moist nut bread with just a hint of

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, December 23,-1894

RUTLAND, OH
Homegrown-Carefully
Sheared Scotch &amp;
White Pine 4' &amp; U~ with
a great selection of
larger trees.
Call 742-2143 or

99 2. 215 6 L--.,..:7.:.:.42-.::.;297..:..9~

Kenny's Auto Rental
Kenny's is the place to come
when you need a car rental.
We """' C11rs 11ad Vaas!
Kenny's Auto Center
264.Upper River Rd.

1-800-486-1590
Bus. (614) 446-9971

Gall~is. OH 45631

CHRISTMAS TREES.
BUDFORD'S

•

FRESH CUT fREES AVAILABLE
OR CUf YOUR OWN

Craft Shop
Located on Cherry Ridge: From Rt. 33, turn East
Bat Darwin onto Rt. 681 . Go 4 miles to Cherry
Ridge Rd, 1 112 miles to. tree farm .
WATCH FOR SIGNS. 10:00 am tt darl&lt; Nov. 25 lhiU Dec. 24
Wa on rides Fri. Sat. Sun.

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK. _
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-71fi2

992-5251

Doug

John

1111Mfn

Beller
Roofinq

Lice nse d
&amp; Bonded

SIDING
&amp;

~

SHINGLES

MARCUM'S ROOFING &amp; REMODELING
Solid Vinyl Rep lacement Windows
SPECIALIZING IN BUILT UP AND FIUBBEFI ROO FING

VINTON, OHIO 45686
MIKE MARCUM
1-800-377-4477

O&amp;E

.
PHONE
Free Eshmates (6 t 4) 245 _0437

ELE~TRI~

OUR PRICES WILL NOT PUT YOU
IN A STATE OF SHOCK.
Resident and Small Electrical Repair
(Lamps Welcome)
Home Repair Also
992-5251

992·7162

John

Doug

MODERN SANrrATION

~

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•

POMEROY, OHIO
Septic tanks cleaned &amp; portable toilets rented.
Daily, weekly &amp; monthly rental rates.
Job sites • C.mp S"es ' Family Reunions &amp; Parties
NOW OFFERING GENERAL HAUL
Limestone, Sand, Gravel and Coal
WE HAVE A-1 TOP SOIL FOR SALE
Licensed llo Bonded - 20 years experience
992-3954
Emergency Phone

.ILft'Y

985~3418

,,

•

f " "

WillOW IYSftMI

•
•

.•
•
•
•
•

.•

rtplacemeilt
windows .
i Fre,e Estimates
• $200 InstalledCall For Details

••
•

••
•

"VISIT OUR SHOWROOJI•
110 Court St. P-roy, Ollie -

-- Awnln'
•'Look ror. the Red iiMl White
992-4,19 AI h.- Owler l-100-291-56
•

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

December

1894

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEA Crossword Puzzle

BRIDOJ:

32 Flellltlwa

ACROSS

PHILLIP
ALDER
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Llirry Wright

.' r 10U11 Cr' liir' liiS

4 .

- F o r .... . , - .

Giveaway

~ AI •

Hllila Drtvo,
8ubdlvtolall. Bllllncl

-

12-23 -M

:;;:..YIIN~~

IN t-A'&gt;e H,; H~~
A ft-AI.

44H4&amp;2Evenlngo I W -

32 Mobile Homes
tor sate

,

Trans po1 tat 1on

1 ·~ Ji1~1" A 5f4f!.e-,

Col ~1101· DIYI: Or 114-

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aA

7 5 2

8 A K J 8

·~

r!oK Q J 9

71 Autoa for Slli

WEST
aK Q J
810 7 4
tKQJ 9 6 5 2

..
-

EAST

a9

4 3

86 5

• 10 4

rlol0876 32
SOUTH

a 1o 8

6

8Q 9 3 2
+A 8 7
rloA 5 4

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Ollldlr4pat14 Ul SAl

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.... =
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6

1111 M.0:01 lnol- okJ~. llodom 2 BR opanR*II. 114lng. ot- -loa, 1 reor Ul OMO.
·
- ...,,.,, ineunnco, Jncl e 1 - . • - f!lco.
mon1ha FREE tal ""'- Only - ., .-Mo. Pluo
1820 Jncl f1114 por mo. ~~-Dopaolt Requtnct, 114-

you
shift? I work days .. .and it looks exactly the same."

11

Help Wlntld

Loat • Found

CII..__.
Help wanted
35 Lota a Acreage
.11
:.. .:.......:..:.=-----1

4 Ao:rll OIIAcl&lt;l_, Pltoe Car·
- 01 Paoiauon Toat And ~lulr
•
Contino! Fnlglll ~
Is Road, N,OOO, 114-3U78111.
lllltng llporllriOJd OfR'8to Nft llsnlo Vtllar, Appro Grove,
ftslbld, ..... --~~~ al btoutlfut 210. kilo, ~ niad,
pulling-,. or puling
awn lf'lllllli, ~-=- Clyde 'towen, Jr.

OWIIJr/OpaNI-

c:a-

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to:
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tlon ... , _ _ _ . . . : "1110,

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en.1 "-

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vlolnlly, 114-.HMI.

p l l , Connldld, .....

1!18 To •

Tro-. -

......_To 8CCI P.O. Box 1131,

"-'· 011 41141.
• ..,.__ POJitlwo • Dr.
llmUJI L"-nt ~
L.llnry.

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oftor 2:00 p.on,
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0151.

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C'ont~. 144.110

up. lmL

Apanment
for Rent

F1nanc 1al

•nlapu 1111orn1....,. ..._
na •-.••• •• , ,...... 21
~lc!n.
no abUgMioiL
lind
IAII· ,........_
..........._

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W.. 111111 -

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Opponunlty

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od

31 Homo for Sale

__

6\~wu:E.:

1\ ~Rf'RI~ 1

441-1032orl14-441.-.
· Utoe 010 114Alllnllon ~ I Doublo Ills
HomJDII,.,. . . ca.... A Como
plota aoc1o 'Of ~128EER Hllll """"' And FurAnd llolllls Hwo. f'uo.
ftiOI fllllti Mh ~
AVIIIIIole Col lw&gt;llll"l lloblll
Hlllllna • c..... A1114-

IIEAinFUL APMntEN111 AT
BUDGET PIIICU AT IACKION
EITmt, 121 ,.,._, i'ltoe
Will to lfloll

_,-to
t:.f .,.......
lot..
.......
llaaa••

NEA

by LUIS Campos
Celetlflty C!pher cryptogram s are creat &amp;d !rom quotahons by famoos people. past and present
Each feller rn the crptler stands tor another Ttlda y's c!ue: D equals G

' u ...

J

TFHC ;

N W U

OKBV

• PM

VMMT

OJAOPWBPFWZ

VMKPTU
NKB

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PREVIOUS SOLUTION : ''Burt Lancasler Few aclors have done so much good
work over so wide a range for so long ." - .Charles Champlin.
Cl 1994 tly NEA . Inc

23

'::~~:~' S©1'-~lA-J.&amp;t.~s·
_ _ __ ...;...._ ldllo4
~.

Rearrange letters of
0 four
scrambled words

WOII
IAMI

CLAY 8. ,OUAN

the

be-

law ro form four Words

H R WE C

UD G0

II

1~

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GE T 0 B
1---r,-T"I--ri-T"I-i
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A mother of ten refused a
martini.
She says she doesn't
6
L-L.s.....J...;....o._
believe in drinking in front of
.------:--:--..,-....;.-;_.,children. and if they aren't
RUNS E E
larouricf • • · ·--- · it?

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'

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.:'!&gt; PRINT NUMBERE D
.:J tETTE iS IN SQUARE$

BIG NATE
A
1""1 ~t't Dill I\ I
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1)0&lt;.101"1

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SCUM-LETS ANSWERS

ft't..t.

S ~ont~
&gt;b&lt;. .

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1 '1\ h
\,a ook 1

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STRIKE. A BLOW IN THE. WAR ON

••" •

Hookup • Aisle · Gorge - DriveJ - SOAKED
Last summer three of my friends got married. At one
bridal shower a disgruntled guest ~ighed , "With so many
showers. it's no wonder everyone gets SOAKED."

HIGH.PRICES. SHOP THE. CLASSiflfDS.

ROBOTMAN

VI'RA FURNITURE
41111NOutA1.141

114-441-3111

-A--IIIII--.
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TEA I P.ll.

Counlry lldeo\porllllllll, 2 . . . ~- • lllllflll •
1001111. W..., ~~ liD Dll Up,
CA, f34CII1Io.
.
llequtNd. Houn llwo. • SM. N Wod. N;
IIM22-02tl4.
Dwo\ Fiorgat Our REPO. leoo
llo!L

.......

IHIJAIIIDI

,

Complete the chuck le quooed
by f,lltng in the m•s.s•ng words
L.......L.-'-....1..-._....L......J you develop from srep No. 3 below .

• ""nus.
' "'

=:;, DI'JW

RloQrando,~AF·

~

CELEBRITY CIPHER

.

I ,0.1 ol ttlt. e.l•el
'o/f. omt. JOrt

OUIIIIY NouMhold Fumltlolngo
1 1111RMiglntor,
lllnott8oo • f141.00;
II" 11-'Jj, 114- IJvlng " - ' 81 •• s:ztl.~od

ApM_.,

ll1o'ft

. .......... . .

23

l--r.:,,~_r:,.e~·~r--,r_.-rl---1

7I2L

-.

Phillip Alder 's n ew book , '"Get
Smarter at Bridge. ·• is available,
outographed upon requ est, f or
$14 .95 from P 0 . Box 169. Roslyn
Hts.. NY 11 :&gt;77-0169.
II_.' 1 9ll ~

&lt;...11KI H

I ladlooe11 Hou. a 2 Car
In VII._ 01

o..cto, For -

Emplo·rrnent Serv1ces
~lp WlntiCI

m£ ~I&lt;E. ll'f.

FtMDollwoy.
01 , CofiM Md Two End TllfoiM;
Qoad Candltlon ~

1

11
...,..

~Y~IC&gt;TO""'

lono onllllole

tho

Real Estate

#lmJrtiJoo F1ww T - - Ao11 I 'riA. Dc. frM. 112 1101,
-~

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..,_1300,_T_

BORN LOSER

..

--,...,..,..=lllld
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Auloe
Or WttlooUI - . . Col
Lally l:twtiJ. IIUM Ill J.
......., To llw: U . . -

........

INOTICE I
OHIO VALLEY FIJBUSHINO CO.
_ , . , . lhot JOU do - -

OtfiJ ........ - -

....... To

~

.Qn I AFI&amp; 141 W
LAlN£'1 FURNITURE
OJII11448N711. EOH.
~ ........ furnlthlnao.
Houra: ......... N. 814-4liIIIZ2, I out Butovlllo Ret.

BUIIIIHS

...........

TNI .IIIMr,

lor ,..... , _

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-.
......_ - . tounctry
ot:
WIJao
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In ........

NOT to Hiod ft!OMr I

_..... . . . . it1£

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lilm up to tllioollllldY Mllftla

.........
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P2211171A11 auo. 4 RIA lludt
Fltnle New SUO. I -

"'"'"""Thot
wv

Hlll't E. . . P.O. . . . .
Al'tlllgMve, Will Y/1211112.

............ PIICI,- ........ Fl 32711
IIDIN.
.

1/t.!NATION

Ut Tho Empire tllobllo
Hwo.
No Eleatototty.
OICI212. u..o

Trlbunl PIIDiognploor AVIItabll
lor Wtdt~ I Olfllr Ewntt
Clll Klwln 11 1111111 Aft• I
p.m.

'·

The form er British Prime Minister
Benjamin Di sr aeli said, "Ther e ar e
three kind s of lies: lies, damned li es.
and statistics." However, although it is
a stati stic, I can avow that the only de·
darer to make six hearts on thi s deal
from th e final of lhe World Wom en's
Pairs was Tobi Deulsch , of Austin ,
Texas.
North !Mildr ed Breed, alsCI' of
Austin I made a splinter bid of four dia·
mends. showing at least ga me values
in hearts and at most one dif mond.
After th at. a couple of cue-hids saw th e
Am eri ca ns in th e popular six-hea r t
slam.
West opened wilh the spade queen.
a Ru.sinow lead l hat promi sed the king
lor a short suill . Perheps some declar·
ers won lhis. played a diamond lo th e
ace. rufled a diamond in the dummy
and played a club to lhe ace, suffering
an immediate r uff and a two-trick defeat. I Of course. even if th e club ace
i sn't ruffed and another diamond i s
ruffed in the dummy. decl ar er isn't
home. /
Deutsc h fo resa w th ese problems.
aided by West 's opening lead. Needin g
hearts to be 3-2 and therefore judging
We st to be very short in club s.
Deut sch du ck ed th e. spade quee n.
West 'continu ed with the spade kin g.
Declarer won with dummy's ace. drew
three r ounds of trumps and r an her
four club tri ck s, discardin g her la sl
spade. A spade ruff in hand ilrought
th e good news of a 3·3 split. Declarer
immediat ely claimed 12 tri cks: t wo
spades. five hearts, one diamond and
four clubs.

44H4110r~AIII

''"iii

Wtllllll to ...,. U.. I
,.,...... ..,.. ....... 1 _ Dial. 1(, p 0 ii:'Utiiii;o&amp;:::

/.J$SON:

A!Ciqlot Doll Wll T1ll~hal•

COUNTRY FURNITURE
Cldlr Bedroom Suite, t7H.
lot, Sit up. 3pa. CIE

17H12CL

..........
,.,
-.1--..... ....... ......_To:
_.....,
~"=--~

Tot&gt;Ay)"

,._~.._·
""'""1111_,..71122.

Rt.ZNonh,I'L--

L Cttoll,

....... . ..... lluno
A . - . for. c.D.L Qulltled
C'IWI Loll cu. Or Dol..,., 11,.. Celllui To 'J I a nlll Aorld..
Truolll. .., ....,. Or
c:.run-. To ........ . . .
~-DuulliM ala
1111- ...._
......... old~old~
~
......,... Ro.to noo~
Nlnli,,...

54 Mlscellai'I80UI
Merchandise

4d II ullllly ..... ,..._ 14"

Dll-

Wllntecl to Buy

FRANK &amp; ERNEST

-.

Goods

Chah, tMtl up. Curio. 4 I I

9

Antiques .

PI• I TloormoJIM $100.00
u..t: 11111 Runnlna .....
$211.00, lug ${0.00 Dual
E m - - l o r Ctoovy , _
hi.OO 114-440-7101

Household

5I

=·.:: s':t ~T~,
44

Clnlor,

Nft:..., lnubr .. d ......_

114-

2 or 3 - - n mobiJ
, _ In Mllfdtopart, - ·

. . . . 1110

1

10.. EIMtrlo JR'8 lkauiJooNI

aludod.
10 -II
- Q40.
Alflwoo, JUJI
lllrlfng

Ao otlol- cat. -

r

DID 'IOV SEND
AN't YOURSELF?

-~.. N. .B.,
JINJII.
. fiM, 114-

Aowootlornni·IIHII ... monlh.
lloltl.

lllrll!lll
• ---ht
ttloMIO

lld

...............

U.... • 7l4ol4 I londod,

IG ....., Than

Building
Supplies .

WELL., DID '(O'J
SEND ANV
YOURSELF?

.

Dou. . . . . , . . . . . . J ... t.,
~ • IIUIIIIM, 1114-4464110.

8

55

RATS! NOONE SENT ME
A CJ.IRISTMAS CARD..

Furnished
Rooms

2br. llllllr, tal lor 46 Space for Rent
nnl1• ~-- I dollooll. AI 1·
12 .....~~, ~ Rd. ... rlglol. ........ hcime - l o r nnlln
30W?I--.
-.yo gorboogo, wotw
lnotUdJd, c.toto aVIIIJblo,
$11/wM., ..... 10 .......... Alhwoo, 114-1112-2117:

tllobllo -

PEANUI'S ·

53

-~-_CoM

2br. ...... """' kilo, .. , ......... ,...,.

:104-t7MIM.

·-4411.

W.

-WHtoor IDol- ''"'Drvw- Hook-UD.
1111
1111111. . fllld, tlll/llo. IIWA111141.
1W1n RhWJ T"""' , _ oecl!llIna 101 11or. HOD
llilooltllud opl. lor oldertv Jncl
45

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

~

.....,. IN. Pt.
~ wv, ... 30W?I-MIO,
4tl.

lor ..... """'-" VlciJO,
llldcl1opool,

---

F.-nllolnt.~

!::."

No pp!ln r
~ 111 -

6 tnatance
7 Cloth meuuro
8 TradeaperiiOn

By Phillip Ald er

u.ct ..aultr Nlnllndo pmot, 2

Fo.n
u.w..., Or Ala Glow*,

114-441-1111 llciridlr .......,,
NOr h4 441 lUll
llodlm 3 D1d1oom Rlnctl Wlh hlnd'-'p•d
z _,.,..
a - On .... 110, 1 11... 0171.

2 bedlown P71.

...........
n, Houaaheld , .

PICKENS FURNITURE

l - '·l

45 Concnlt
47 Actroo41 Taken tlloplty
50 Small houte
pet
52 Hott
roam
53 The Etoat
19 Medieval poem 54 Chalrt
20 N•rrow
55 Loud noteea
opening
22 Goat
DOWN
23 SandWICh tflop
1 Stutla
24 Deviates
2 Creepily
28 Body orpnt
3 Arched way
28 I think, there4 Clean-air grp.
fore-511Ctor 30 It able to
Lugotl
31 Regret

The one and only

54 Mlacellaneous
Merchandise

, _ , ADMIIIIIII -

41 Hou181 for Rent

Flml 8eoldna Fun
'lime /On Col C' ..... .,...... - . ....... T-paldNo

::--- lbllllll • D F I bto,

-·~·-.

•

1111-31011, •
:GOpin ... . , . . _ ollw Sprn.
2 lor ...... In ...._., 1

Tilling Appilclllono Fw 1

,... 'lime LPII, ~ I l t d - Fun I • =
" - In " - to tho llodiOol Carpot I t1oo1,
~· ell SA 110, Qalllpollo, Qal.palle cttr Limite, No Polo,
AICI/IIO. Fw ~loftl Coli:
-.

1111

Dlld. ofsoolll. •
11124!ei.

eard .,.._,

~ • • ,.,._ 1

= _.. . ., -..

- t.orvalumtJtoid
1tor. """""""'eio!."
-tng.
_...._

A VISIT!!

Household
Goods

30 llllllan money
39 RSVP pert
40 H•ul
42 StltchH
44 Without ond

Vulnerable: North-Soulh
Dealer : North
South
West North East
1 r1o
Pass
I8
2•
4t
Pass
5 r1o
5•
5a
Pass
6•
Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead: • Q

JUGHAID !!
LOOKY WHO'S
COMIN' FER

51

33 Shlparoe

I V.I.P.
6 EvergrMn ute
11 Unlock apln
13 Chlot ore of
lead
14 Typo of atork
15 Arube or St.
Thoma&amp;
18 Fluatlan flghtor
plane
17 ... - - where
the buffalo

••

•

oct;

Sup:111rs
&amp; L1veslock

FJIIIl

61 Farm Equlpmelit

Serv1ces

81

By GARY LARSON

..

ASTRO-GRAPH -

MOll I AI Ill-. I ......

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

........, ,,,I...........,_
....., .......
::g:- ..-......
Clwil Cllw~ .... pnllt

82

Plumbing a

'•

reveals which signs are romanlically perfeel for -you. Mail $2 lo Matchmaker. cia
lhis· newspaper, P.O. Box 4465 . New
York. NY 10163
AQUAFIIUS (Jon. 20·Feb. 19) You will
be successful in what you set out to do
loday as long as you do not hope to substrtute hard wort&lt; lor luck.
PISCES
20-Miorch
Avoid mak·

star1 off fee ling indifferent today. but once
you e ngage in a compet ition , yo ur moti-

vation and enthusiasm will surface and
you'll play to win.
•
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22) Personal garn is
ind ic al ed today In arra ngemenls you
manalfe personally. In siluations others
conlrol. you might nol do as wall
VIRG.O (Aug. 23·Sepl. 22) If you need lo
.L.

10 advertise •any prllle""lC8·

CLASSIFIEDS

limitation or dlocllmlnatlon
baed on noce, oob(; religion,

oox famlllalatatua or national
• origin, or any lntenllon 10
ll'l@l!t JIIY ~ 1!!!1~.
limitation or dl8crlmlnallon.•

IWIL
nME

SAVERS.••

I'

Thll nanJPIPif Will not
knowllngly eacept
IICIYe-.nta for IIII-o
wNCIIIIIn VIolation of 1he law.

Our 181dell aro heiii&gt;V

lnfotmed thaliA d\ool* 1Q1
ldverttaed In 11111 newspaper

are available on an·equal

oppo!IUnily -

I

. J

lV...'B· l.rt·rhday'·

perllnent !acts al l irs.t

glance. You won'l miss a tricl&lt; after'S second inspection, howev~tr.
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Try nol to
presume that your ideas are superior to
others loday. The key lo group suci:ess is
Saturday, Dec. 24 , 1994
lo allow everyone involved lo make a
Your chart indicates that you might be contribution .
unusually reslless in lhe coming year . TAURUS (April 2CJ.M•y 20) Make " a
Travel is a slrong probability; perhaps poont lo haggle and bargain loday in a
several short trips and one ollong dura- bu~iness arrangement or.il you purchase
lion.
·
· a cosily "em. A little n"1!01ialing will proCAPRICORN (Dec . .22·J•n. 19) Your ; duce better lerms.
·
· '
aaiociates might be lethargic loday. so.il : GEMINI (Mev 21..June 20) You will make
wiH be. up to you to motivate them 10 lake remart&lt;able progress today loward one ol
action i collective project. Know where y our ambitious objecllves .. However, do
10 look lor rornanee and you'll lind it. The not lake your good luc~ lor granted.
1\llro· Graph Malchmaker inslanlly CANCER (June 21..Julv 22) You ml~ht
I .
I

in

·

I
I

e
•

might

•JUI.I

barely know, have a friend who is belter
acquainted with thi s individual intercede

on your behalf.
LIBFIA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Stand up lor
you rse lf today il you haven't received
wiTat ·you are due . Reme mb er,.-Th e
squeaky wheel gets the grease.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NOV. 22) An arrangement with two friends might require a li«le
reworking Ieday. II handled properly . all
will benefit in different ways ol equ al
vatue.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 21)
Although you might prefer to remain in
th,e background Ieday . the course ol
events may Ioree you lo publlcly deal with
a siluation sHeeting yoiJr reptitatr9n.

)

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Music Shop

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~riday, oecember 23, 199(c

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

•

Laid-back churches promote great awakening
'

EDITOR'S NOTE- Out or tile genentlon lll8iDIIDe churclaes roraot
... uilea a aew religious middle dll8s that Ia tnaslormlllfl Amerkaa
Jlroteltaadlm. loB the lint IDstallmellt or the two-part series ''The New
Devout" details, baby boomers aad busten are lladlo&amp; a spiritual home
Ia three aew movemeata that combiDe a casual worship style with a
cleaaaadlq coaservati.e theology.

!tv DAVID. BAtGGS .

--

.

AI' Religion Writer

RIVERSIDE, Calif. (AP)-The lineofcarssnakeddown the long driveway
of Harvest Christian Fellowship and stretched for a quaner-mile alongArling·
too Avenue.
Outside, between the capuccino stand and extensive playground, young men
huddled in T-shirts proclaiming' 'God's O~m,'' ~bile bro~ ~irtysoJI!ethin~

.
'

~mong
!

,.

middle class

•

,,
Cl o ud y

psrents in denim watched their children run ahead in play clothes donned
before - not after- church.
!aside, Bonnie McNichols, dressed casually in a brightly colored shirt, knelt .
in prayer. She bad been baptiied in Baptist, Nazarene and Salvation Army
churches and had thought of church as a place to go on Christmas and Easter,
and only then if you could afford nice clothes.
When her marriage broke up and "I was hurting so bad I didn't have
anyplace else to go," she ventured into Harvest, part of the Calvary Chapel
movement.
"It was like I got married," said McNichols, 61. "I cried. I knew it was a
commitment for life."
Parking jams in church lots. Bible-toting baby boomers and busters. No
suiiS, no ties, noduli services. Three rapidly growing movements are emerging
from the fringes of American religious life and transforming Protestantism.
Since the mid-'60s, the Hope Chapel, Calvary Chapel and Vineyard Chris·
tianFellowshipmovementsliavegrownfromthreetomorethan900churcbes.
And while boomers and busters increasingly tum their backs on mainline
churches, nearly three-quarters of these movements' congregation members
are between the ages of 21 and 45.
Calvary, Vineyard and Hope have reached out to many of the people often
overlooked by mainline churches - youths, blue-collar families, people
recovering from addictions to sex, alcohol or drugs, and the adult children of
divorce.
.
Reflecting their Southern California roots, the movements have achieved
success by blending conservative Christian theology with a laid-back approach. Pastors dress in jeans, rock replaces organ music, and members hug
one another.
Already, the influence on mainline churches can be seen in the addition of
contemporary music at youth services and the evolution of specialized ministries for men, women, singles and young couples.
Some are calling it a third Great Awakening among the middle class in
America.
. "In my view, it's been a reformation," says the Rev. Carl Tuttle, the cherub; faced senior pastor of the Vineyard Christian Fellowship.

em\)lem can feefat home.
·,
~reaching to the first generation in modem times raised to a large exte~t
outside the church, the leaders of Vineyard, Hope and Calvary share the sam~
credo: Don't get hung up on dress codes and music from another century ~h~t
keep people away.
,
"We've alienated people on the negotiable issues and they never have an
opportunitytohearthenon-negotiables,"saidtheRev.GregLaurie,Harvest's
pastor.
Those non-negotiablcs include traditional Christian beliefs in the divinitY.
and resunection of Christ and that the Bible reveals the Word of God. Based
on their understanding of Scriptures, church leaders also take strong stand(
against abortion and homosexuality.
c;ompletely untraditional is the spareness of both the churches' services and
their architecture, with sanctuaries containing little of the -usual Christian
symbolism such as altar tables or large crosses as backdrops.
For the first 30 minutes at Hope Chapel, a band plays. contemporary
Ch~stian music. People Clad in shorts and jeans, jogging suits and &amp;expensive.
slacks feel free to raise their bands, clap, stand up or sit quietly as the spirit
moves them.
When .the music stops, a minister stands and gives a low-key, hour-long
sermon.
Nazarian, a former Catholic whose lanky frame and silver hair could make
him a stand-in for Phil Donahue, is no hellfire preacher. Often, he roams the
front of the room like the talk show host he resembles, explaining the fourt11
chapter of John.with his left hand cas)Ially tucked in his pocket.
.
"High-grace, low-risk" is the way Nazarian characterizes the churchgoing
experience at Hope.
~· Sometimes, we get ·focused on the church as an institution, rather than
people encountering God," he said. "You have to minister to your culture.';
That requires work in a culture where many baby boomets and busters view
the church as an uncaring institution inelevant to their lives, Nazarian said.
i\t Hope, the church holds events such as free car washes to encourage
newcomers. "Jesus washed feet. We wash cars," he said.
;
The Rev. Chris Cannon, associate pastor, was first attracted to Hope Chapel
\
in :1985 by the surfing ministry, which sponsored surfing films, trips and
Greeters welcome members of Hope Chapel in Hermosa Beach the moment giveaways to the young men and women hanging around the beach a couple
· they enter tbe psrking Jot of the Lucky Mart supermarketthat overshadows the blocks away. He is typical of many of the movements' ministers, who,ari~
· convened bowling alley housing the chureh.
diiectly from the membership without bothering with a seminary degree. ,
The Rev. Zac Nazarian, dressed in an outfit more akin to golfipg than
OnSaturdaymomingsoveratVineyardChristianinAnabeim,one~UQuo~f
pastoring, waits at the top of the stairs to add a hug and his own warm greeting. members picks a neighborhood for street evangelism, which includes.worship
Forget about stains on the rugs. Drinking coffee is encouraged in the and clothing distribution. Another"evangelism-grocery team" goes door-tosanctuary, a simple meeting room with hard-backed chairs and a podium. It is door in a different ,11rea, inviting residents to church, volunteering prayer for
a
whe.rc a ~ou~g man in a black leather jacket sporting an American flag needs in the household and offering groceries.

pace

•
mttsBig rigs deliver Christmas
Family of truckers puts holiday on parade in Vinton
By KEVIN PINSON
Tllil11 81ntlnel8tatl
VINTON-Christmasmustbeprettybigin this village
The truckers, joined by Santa Claus
of300pcople-ittookmorelbanadozen18-wbeeltrucks and other village residents, greeted the
to delivef it Friday.
Erom the air, it must have looked like the world's' Christmas weekend whh blasts of air
longest and slowest-moving convoy. Actually, it was just . horns and the smell of dleaelfuel.
tbe ·Marcum family parading through the center of the
• village In 15 Atlas Van Lines, Inc, trucks decorated with
• wreat~· tinsel and ribbon.
true~.
.
The truckers, joined by Santa Claus and other village
"It was better (money) than anything I had seen at the
residents, greeted the Christmas weekend with blasts of time," he said. Five of Harold's brothers, some of whom
air horns and.the smell of diesel fuel.
were making$50 a week, saw that that he was bringing in
Tliree generations of Marcurns drive trucks for a living._, $50 a day and decided to join the hauling profession.
moel of them -for Adas.
Today, more than 20 memben of lhe extended family
~lroi!I Marcum, the oldest son of the late HoUie and drive trucks. Harold, the oldest, is now retired. The youngLola Marcum, started the trucking tradition in 1955 when csris·his nephew, 27-year-old J.D. Campbell.
bo qliit pumping gas for $1 an hourand bought himself a
When not on the road, most of the Marcums reside in

•Let it snow•:

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8 PM • 12 MIDNIGHT
EVERYDAY ·SiVINGS
FROM
.
I

L----'-'--\---'-- - - '

POLAR PREPARED • Ed

20%To·60%

.,

8 PM·9 PM-ALL SWEATERS
REDUCED All ADDITIONAL

•

Sllloastudsaexttooneofthe
Ustatehilbwtydepartmeot's
..ow plows at tile Chester of·
Ike.

15% SAYINGS TO. 50%

&gt;

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r

9 PM·l 0 PM- FREE GIFT
WITH EACH PURCHASE

in early
January,saidoffice
manager Dave
Speaecr.
The new irucks,
equipped with
snow plows, along'
with a new road
grader, will bolster
thegarage'ssnow~

fighting arsenal which is responsible for clearing 250
miles of road, he indicated.
In addition, the garage has enough salt stockpiled to
· handle three-to-lour really bad snow stonns, he added.
As fat as preparedness: "We're ready, willing and
able ... and we don't WJnt to," he said..
The Ohio Department of Transportation garage in
Chester is fully prepsred for another monstrous win·
ter, said Earl Crothers, area maintenance supervisor
for Meigs, Gallia and Vinton couQties.
The Chester office has1,118.9 tons of salt, 920 tons
of ciaders and 300 tons of salt-cinder mix, Crothers
said. 1be state offtee has 12 plows wilb three trucks
that can have plows and spinners attached within 30
minutes, bo added. A spinner is the attachment on the
back of a vehicle that slings the salt and cinders.
"I think we can handle anything.Meigs County has

By KEVIN PINSON
Tribune r.- Stan
GAlliPOLIS - Two upcoming' .
murder trials have the county sweat :
ing.
,
·
Becausfthe alleged murderers are -·
indigent, the county must foot the bill
for their defenses.
"We are worried to death about it,"
' County Commission President Ken- ..
hteth Fanner said."We hope tbe$C two
murder cases ... will J['ot break the
.county. We have othei: reapoasibili-·
ties in the county that need the re!IOurces. But we, by law, are forced to
defend the indigent and we will make
sure we meet the letter of the law."
According to records from the
auditor's office, lhecountyspent more
than $81,000 in 1991 for the defense
of William Mathias, who was convicted of the rape and murder of a 12·
year-old girl.
Total expenditures from the indi·
gent defense fund for that year were
$250,000, Commission Vice Pr~i· ·
dent Harold Montgomery said.
"
This year, the county spent' ·
$120,663 of the $130,000 appropriated for indigent def~nse. And there"
were no major trials.
If the Mathias case is any indication, the two upcoming murder trials.
could more than wipe out the yet-to-'
be-detennined !995 appropriation.
In 1991, money had to be pulle..:.
from line items in the General Fund to
meet expenses, Montgomery said.
The commission is anticipating taking the same steps for 1995, possibly.·
on a grander scale.
"We're going to have to take into
Continued on
A2
.

· IN THIS DAY WHEN CHRIS~S Is so
hlgh,Y commercialized, tM Bntdford Church
of Chrl8t In Melp County u..d s live Mtlv. tty to ptJint up the "'!'I mflllnlng of the obs.,.nce- the birth of Christ This Is the
third ye.r for the church's tableau. Roles
were taken by costumed church meml»rs,
and brought In for the display were two
sheep, a goat and s donkey. While st right,
Ammee Carman, 4, daughter of Tim and
Beth Csrman of Gallipolis, puts In her order
to Santa Clsus Thursday at the Gslllpolls
City par/c. Santa was ·making one of his/sst
publlt; appearances before returning to ttr.
North Pole to prepare for Saturday night's
toy delivery.

COntlnUid on p~~ge A2

'St/f·motlvstetl achiever'

.,

·as Eastern grad featured

~

.'
,•'

as star of •Generation x·

•

10 PM·ll PM- ALL JEANS
REDUCED AN
ADDITIONAL 15%.

•,

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~

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We're delighted with how Southeast Ohio has taken to dialing 10-ATI first •t
41

.:.··

for 10% toll call savings within the 614 area shaded oo the map. So to keep "
those savings coming, we're ~oing to extend the 10% offer rhrough 1/31/95.
Keep dialing 10-ATI first; and the savings will keep coming your way.
That's 10-AIT + 1 + the number as you usuallY do.
With Al&amp;T there are no time restrictions, no gimmicks. No need to sign
up. No monthly fee. If you have any questions please give us a call at
1800-282-4212, ext. 80010. It's all so simple. It's lOtATI and 100/o savings.
Al&amp;T is bringing quality and savings even clos~r to home.

AN ADDITIONAL 10% OFF
YOUR

liVE!

;

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Glft\Vnp

~--~-. A1lf. Yollr_'lhle_\'oice.'" _

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'SoYe .m. on hills hi S25 or 1es&lt; Comparison 10 Oh;; Belts loll
sched&gt;le B. SUbj&lt;ct 10 hilling mi~hillfJ&lt; Nut milable in M1. \\:moo,

1\ederi&lt;klown, Danville, Go']'hier. Martinsbufl!, Ulico, ilomer and
. Ct:nlero•nl! areas. l'romolioo extendc:d lhroujjh 1/31/9S.

.f

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..

Meigs County hires fair housing
coordinator, grant administrator

GOOD MORNING

Governor ties gas
tax increase
to voter approval

Dl
83
D4-7

Insert
A4
A5

Cl-6
81
A2
...=.._

c.,..,ow.v...,,.......c..

N-~~~~1~~~23. Raqdolpll moved to Minot (average February te!flperature: :~:c~:=~~~~!:~;:.~.::a~d~:~~r:~ Miners going back to work at once-idled mine
ni~_l_and 11l!ilt a buaincss from scra.t~l).,__~~ i)lt~rviewed most j~_

~

1'

ews capsules

Business
EAST MEJbS -One 1985 Eastern High School graduate has landed herself ~ By JIM FREEMAN
an exclusive position in Europe and has been featured in the Dec. 12 issue of
Tlmt...Sentlnel Staff
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Calendars
Fortune Magaiine.
POMEROY. The Meigs County Board of Com misVoters - no! state legislators Classifieds
Beth Randolph was chosen a5 one of the top
sioners. Friday hired Jean Trussell of Long Bottom as
should decide if the stale gasonine of 250 candidates to be featured in this
fair housing coordinator and grant administrator.
· line tax is increased to provide Comia
article about diligent members of generation X
Cunently, Trussell is the executive director of the
more money for highway con- Editorials
• thoSe born aftel1963.
Meigs County Housing Authoritl( and is employed by
struction, Gov . George Local
Randolph, a Reedsville native, describes herthe village of Middleport as grants administrator for two
Gov. volnovtch
Voinovich said.
self as a self-motivated achiever, according to
and three days 8 week, respectively.
Voinovich said he has not Obituaries
Fortune Magazine. She bad managed a major
According to commission President Fred Hoffman, detennined if a boost in the 22-cents-a-gallon fuel tax is Sports
reservations C:enter for Choice Hotels, which
she will be hired as fair housing cootdinator and grants necessary.
.
Along the River
operates Quality and Comfort Inns.
administrator for a minimum of 16 hours a ·week at
"Let's put it this way. I have not had the extens1ve
Her father disappeared when she was 8 years
$1l .50 per hour, her cunent waae. Sbe will work 16 • discussion thatl should have with thee.pcrts atthis stage _W..._ea:.:.:.c:th_:e_r_ _ _ __
old, so she and her two younger sisters were
hours a week for the Meigs County Housing Authority ofthegametocommentonewayortheother," Voinovich
raised by their mother, Jenny Jackson, on a high
and eighl hours a week for the vill•sc ofM«iileport.
said.
·
school secretary's salary. Randolph put herself
Hoffman said the county is required to have a fair
The Ohio DepartmentofTransportation warned earlier
through two-years at Hocking College by workhousing coordinator and does not have one at present.
this month that the share of gas tax money used to build
L..!!!~~~~..J ing in a telemarketing facility that Choice opcr·
"Meigs County also nails a grants administrator to . roads was beingdrainedforthc State Highway Patrol, tax
ated. ·
not only assist the county and communities in applying credits for ethanol, environmental mandates and olher FmiCrpw
"I was a sponge," Randolph told Fortune Magazine in an interview· "llo~e
for grants, but to do the necessary administration and purposes. ·
.
BobHoe]k;h
tfavel. I absolutely love tho haspilality industry. And yes,l had seenn m~y~
m~om~+~~~oca~l'~~~~~:grants and rcvolviliJ loans which we
Another $!50 million a year js needed to keep hlghway JimSapds
... "Struggle: I wanted·more·for·myself:"
.
. --· siiCI-. -·
c onSitllCli'On-from-halting'Within-two y~ars;-the-agency&lt;
After graduation in 1967, Randolph worked as a travel agent. Then &lt;:;boice
"Not having such a person has caused continuing said. An increase of 3 cents a gallon in the gas tax would
called to 'I'Y that the compstiy planned to open a large reservations center in
problems with the Ohio Department of Development raise such an amount.

ll

I

9
~~~ :sr:!!·:
Expense of pending
murder trials may
strain county budget

POMEROY- 'Let it snow,let it snow,let it ID()w'
is the fune some
and state snow removal worke11 are
singing.
:
Once frost-bit·
ten by last winter's
heavy snows, local
removal crews
aren't being twice
shy about preparations for ·thiS win- ..
ter.. The ·Meigs
County Hlt:hwllY

TONIGHT

•·

Symbols of the season...

~ORGE

•.

.Sill!

Vinton. Although
they spend a lot
of time traveling
(brother Holley
bas been in all 48
of the continental
United States as
well as Mexico
and Canada), the
family is still very
close, Harold
said.
BIG RIG PARADE-Onlookers watch u15 tndls iach their way dowl State RGIIte
"We had what iD Vinton Friday. ne Marcum ramlly, wlllch luis more than 20 professloul tnlck drlv~
we called a pray- Jlllracled through the •lllage berore holdlag their annual Christmas reast at the towa haiL. _
ingmotherandwe
always stuck together," he said. "If one of us was in tiona! attention. The Wall Street Journal spotlighted titi:
trouble, all of us were in trouble."
Marcums in one of its " 12 Days of Christmas" features ~t
The family's holiday homecoming bas attracted anaContinued on page A2
••

By
ABATE and JIM FREEMAN
Timll Santlnel Statl

Nonoal
hPIQIIII

Details

on Page

Meigs County crews
prepare for winter

(Lee, Zena, Wrangler, Carhcnt, RIO &amp; ••)

•

cailllldltea. trained the sujlervilcrs; and rieJIUiiated contracts for offtee' '!Uip-

ment, cleaning supplies and even food for the kitchen.
·~was scared to death of supervising people older than me," Randolph says,
"and at first I hired passive.people like I uaed to be." Refreshingly unjade~·)his
"simple Miclwestem gal," u ·• calls herself, wauld stun most MBA types .
with her ideas for motivating worken.
Her best, which helped makt; Mi'not a model of productivity for Choice, is
. her ~okiest: "My communication hig~way, • ihe said excitedly to the Fonune
Mal'zine interviewer. Last Febru..:l', when SOII1C of her 18.supervisors were
.

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Contln

•O!I'JIIIII A2

local monitoring, Sll,OOOJnthe-1992-Community-Dc~ C-HARbESTON,-W.V~. (AI') -At least So Unit~ Mine Workers coal miners_hi.V••t~i:j-t-velopment Block Grant formula grant wu not used by b.red at a onoe-idled Eastern Associated Coal Corp. mme m Kanawha County, a umon 01
Meigs County and therefii!C lost." ·
said Friday.
·
. .
.
. .
Funding the position comes from $15,500 available
Bob Phalen, president of the UMW'~ Dtstnct 17 tn Charleston, satd mmers and ~ntractors
from fair housing and local CDBG administratioa funds. agreed to a contract Tbussday. The !"aJonty of the atc?'d follows the 1993 Bthjmtnous Coal
Hoffman said the aetion will be "good for the county" Operators Association agreement With the umon, he sat~. .
.
and "could develop into 1arJer activities ~ 'the future
Up to 175 jobs will eventually be added at the Mountam Vtew surface.mn~ near Cbely~. he
with grant fundi obtained t!uouP tllis·~ for Meigs said. The min~. fonnerly known as Slaughters Creek, was closed about ten years ago, .•dhna
County and villages and IOWDIIIipt Within the county." hundreds or workers, Phalen Slid. Some of the 50 lUred were former employees of the mtne; he
1 Trussell is to begin her acldi~ duti~ ~Jan. 1.
said.
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